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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67859 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67859)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of American Horological Journal, Vol. I,
-No. 1, July 1869, by G. B. Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: American Horological Journal, Vol. I, No. 1, July 1869
- Devoted to Pratical Horology
-
-Editor: G. B. Miller
-
-Release Date: April 17, 2022 [eBook #67859]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL,
-VOL. I, NO. 1, JULY 1869 ***
-
-
-
-
-
- AMERICAN
-
- Horological Journal.
-
- VOL. I. NEW YORK, JULY, 1869. NO. 1.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- ASTRONOMY IN ITS RELATIONS TO HOROLOGY, 5
-
- WATCH AND CHRONOMETER JEWELLING, 11
-
- HINTS ON CLOCKS AND CLOCK MAKING, 15
-
- NOTICES OF NEW TOOLS, 17
-
- GREENWICH OBSERVATORY, 17
-
- PINIONS, 20
-
- NEW THREE-PIN ESCAPEMENT, 23
-
- ENGLISH OPINION OF AMERICAN WATCH MANUFACTURE, 23
-
- CORRESPONDENCE, 24
-
- ECLIPSE OF THE SUN, 25
-
- DIAMOND CUTTING, 25
-
- ALLOYS OF ALUMINUM WITH COPPER, 25
-
- EQUATION OF TIME TABLE, 28
-
-⁂ _Address all communications for_ HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL _to_ G. B.
-MILLER, _P. O. Box 6715, New York City. Publication Office 229
-Broadway._
-
-
-
-
-Astronomy in its Relations to Horology.
-
-NUMBER ONE.
-
-
-However accurate an instrument for the mensuration of time may be,
-it would be of little use for close observation unless we have some
-standard by which to test its performance. We look to Astronomy to
-furnish us with this desideratum, nor do we look in vain. The mean
-sidereal day, measured by the time elapsed between any two consecutive
-transits of any star at the same meridian, and the mean sidereal
-year--which is the time included between two consecutive returns of the
-sun to the same star--are immutable units with which all great periods
-of time are compared; the oscillations of an isochronous pendulum
-affording us a means of correctly dividing the intermediate space into
-hours and days.
-
-We must premise that the whole theory of taking time by sidereal
-observations is based on angular motion, the mensuration of one of
-the angles of motion giving a measurement of space, so that to say
-space, or distance, is equivalent to saying time. From noon of one
-day to noon of another is the whole problem to be solved by correct
-division. The astronomical day begins at noon, but in civil law the
-day is dated from midnight. So in the year the astronomical day is
-dated December 31, while in common reckoning the 1st of January is the
-initial point. This day is divided into twenty-four hours, counted in
-England, America, and the most of the Continental nations of Europe, by
-twelve and twelve. The French astronomers, however, adopted the decimal
-system, for ease in the computation. Thus they divided the day into
-ten hours, the hour into one hundred minutes, and the minute into one
-hundred seconds. This plan was in conformity with the French system
-of decimal weights and measures. Again, in Italy, the day was divided
-into twenty-four hours, but counting from one to twenty-four o’clock.
-The French system presents some features well worthy of adoption, as it
-gives results so much more easy in computation--a facility unattainable
-in the common division; yet it did not come into general use in other
-countries, and although some French astronomers still hold to the
-system, it is gradually dying out.
-
-At one time during the Revolution in France a clock in the gardens of
-the Tuileries was regulated to show time by the decimal system.
-
-For the Horologist the mean length of the day is sufficient to show the
-rate of his instrument for that particular day, but the astronomical
-and civil division requires a much longer period of observation. This
-is obtained by the position of the mean annual equinoxes or solstices,
-and is estimated from the winter solstice, the middle of the long
-annual night under the North Pole; and the period between this solstice
-and its return is a natural cycle, peculiarly suited for a standard of
-measurement.
-
-Even with such a standard as the civil year of 365d. 5h. 48m. 49.7s.,
-the incommensurability that exists between the length of the day and
-the real place of the sun makes it very difficult to adjust the ratio
-of both in whole numbers. Were we to return to the point in the earth’s
-orbit in exactly 365 days, we would have precisely the same number
-of days in each year, and the sun would be at the same point on the
-ecliptic at the same second at the beginning and end of the year. There
-is, however, a fraction of a day, so that a solar year and civil are
-not of equal duration.
-
-It is thus we have our bissextile year, from the fact that the
-inequality amounts to nearly a quarter of a day, so that in four years
-we have a whole day’s gain; but not exactly, because a fraction still
-remains to be accounted for. Now, if we should suppress the one day
-of leap-year once at the end of each three out of four centuries, the
-civil would be within a very small fraction equal to the solar year,
-as given by observation; this small fraction would be almost entirely
-eliminated, provided we suppressed the bissextile at the end of every
-four thousand years. Were this fraction neglected, the beginning of the
-new civil year would precede the tropical by just that much, so that in
-the course of 1507 years the whole day’s difference would obtain.
-
-The Egyptian year was dated from the heliacal rising of the star
-Sirius; it contained only 365 days. By easy computation it can be
-shown that in every 1461 years a whole year was lost; this cycle was
-called the Sothaic period, in which the heliacal rising of Sirius
-passed through the whole year and took place again on the same day.
-The commencement of that cycle took place 1322 years before Christ.
-The year by the Roman calendar was dated by Julius Cæsar the 1st of
-January, that being the day of the new moon immediately following the
-winter solstice in the 707th year of Rome. Christ’s nativity is dated
-on the 25th of December, in Cæsar’s 45th year, and the 46th year of the
-Julian calendar is assumed to be the 1st year of our era. The preceding
-year is designated by chronologists the 1st year before Christ, the
-dates thence running backward the same as they run forward subsequent
-to that period.
-
-Astronomically, that year is registered 0; the astronomical year begins
-at noon on the 31st of December, and the date of any observation
-expresses the number of days and hours which have actually elapsed
-since that time, the 31st of December--Year 0.
-
-The year is divided into months by old and almost universal consent,
-but the period of seven days is by far the most permanent division
-of a rotation of the earth around the sun. It was the division long
-before the historic period. The Brahmins in India used it with the same
-denominations as at the present day the Jews, Arabs, Egyptians, and
-Assyrians. “It has survived the fall of empires, and has existed among
-all successive generations, a proof of their common origin.”
-
-Nothing can be more interesting in the study of astronomy than its
-chronological value. La Place says: “Whole nations have been swept
-from the earth, with their languages, arts, and sciences, leaving but
-confused masses of ruins to mark the place where mighty cities stood;
-their history, with but the exception of a few doubtful traditions, has
-perished; but the perfection of their astronomical observations marks
-their high antiquity, fixes the periods of their existence, and proves
-that even at that early time they must have made considerable progress
-in science.”
-
-The earth revolving around the sun in an ellipse, the position of the
-major axis of the orbit would indicate something in regard to eras in
-astronomy extending not only beyond the historical period, but so far
-back in the past that imagination is almost at fault. The position of
-the major axis of the orbit depends on the direct motion of the perigee
-and the precession of the equinoxes conjointly, the annual motions
-respectively being 11´´.8 and 50´´.1, the two combined motions being
-61´´.9 annually. A tropical revolution is made in 209.84 years. This
-being a constant quantity, we may ascertain when the line of the major
-axis coincided with the line of the equinoxes. This occurrence took
-place about 4,000 or 4,090 years before the year 0. In the year 6,483
-the major axis will again coincide with the line of the equinoxes,
-but then the solar perigee will coincide with the vernal equinox. So,
-it will be seen that the period of revolution is 20,966 years. But in
-the progress of this revolution there must have been a time when the
-major axis was perpendicular to the line of the equinoxes. A simple
-calculation will show that the eventful year was 1250; and so important
-is this event considered, that La Place, the immortal author of the
-_Méchanique Céleste_, proposed to make the vernal equinox of this year
-the initial day of the year 1 of our era. Again, at the solstices the
-sun is at the greatest distance from the equator; consequently the
-declination of the sun is equal to the obliquity of the ecliptic.
-The length of a shadow cast at noonday from the stile of an ordinary
-sun-dial would accurately determine the precise time on which this
-position occurs.
-
-Though wanting in accuracy, such a measurement is of interest, from the
-fact that there are recorded observations of this kind that were taken
-in the city of Layang, in China, 1100 years before our present era is
-dated. This observation gives the zenith distance of the sun at the
-moment of the observation. Half the sum of the zenith distances gives
-the latitude, and half their difference gives the obliquity of the
-ecliptic at the period. Now the law of the variation of the ecliptic
-is well known, and modern computation has verified both the moment
-of taking the observation and the latitude of the place. Eclipses
-were the foundation of the whole of Chinese chronology, and recorded
-observations prove the civilization of that strange race for 4700 years.
-
-Horology, with astronomy, was not neglected even as early as 3102 years
-before Christ, as the following will show.
-
-The cycles of Jupiter and Saturn are very unequal, the latter being a
-period of 918 years; the mean motion of the two planets was determined
-by the Indians in that part of the respective orbits where Saturn’s
-motion was the slowest and Jupiter’s the most rapid. This observed
-event must have been 3102 years before, and 1491 after the year 0; but
-the record shows that the observation was taken before the last-named
-date.
-
-Since both solar and sidereal time is estimated from the passage of
-the sun and the equinoctial point across the meridian of the place of
-observation, the time will vary in different places by as much as the
-passage precedes each. It being obvious that when the sun is in the
-meridian at any one place, it is midnight at a point on the earth’s
-surface diametrically opposite; so an observation taken at different
-places at the same moment of absolute time, will be recorded as having
-happened at different times. Therefore when a comparison of these
-different observations is to be made, it becomes necessary to reduce
-them by computation to what the result would have been had they been
-taken under the same meridian at the same moment of absolute time. Sir
-John Herschel proposed to employ mean equinoctial time, which is the
-same for all the world. It is the time elapsed from the moment the
-mean sun enters the mean vernal equinox, and is reckoned in mean solar
-days and parts of days. This difference in time is really the angular
-motion of the earth, and by measuring it the longitude of any place on
-the surface of the earth can be determined, provided we have a standard
-point of departure, and an instrument capable of accurately dividing
-the time into small quantities during its transit from the meridian on
-which it was rated.
-
-As will be hereafter shown, the axis of the earth’s rotation is
-invariable. Were the position of the major axis of the earth’s orbit
-as immutable, an observation of any star on the meridian taken at
-any place would always be the same. Again, the form of the earth has
-an important effect; the equatorial diameter exceeds the polar, thus
-giving a large excess of matter at the equator. Now the attraction of
-an external body not only draws another to it in its whole mass, but,
-as the force of attraction is inversely as the square of the distance,
-it follows that the attracted body would be revolved on its own centre
-of gravity until its major diameter was in a straight line with the
-attracting body.
-
-The sun and moon are both attracting bodies for the earth; the plane
-of the equator is at an angle to the plane of the ecliptic of 23° 27´
-34´´.69, and the plane of the moon’s orbit is inclined to it 5° 8´
-47´´.9 Now from the oblate form of the earth, the sun and moon, acting
-obliquely and unequally, urge the plane of the equator from its own
-position from east to west, thus changing the equinoctial points to the
-extent of 50´´.41 annually.
-
-This action, were it not compensated by another force, would in time
-alter the angle of the ecliptic until the equatorial plane and the
-ecliptic coincided. There are few but have seen the philosophical toy
-called the Gyrascope. This toy, on a miniature scale, gives a fine
-illustration of the force brought in to correct the combined action of
-the sun and moon on the obliquity of the equator. The rotation of the
-earth is held in its own plane by its own revolution, the same as the
-gyrascope seems to overcome the laws of gravitation by its force of
-revolution.
-
-But not only do the sun and moon disturb the plane of the ecliptic,
-but the action of other planets on the earth and sun is to be taken
-into account. A very slow variation in the position of the plane of the
-ecliptic, in relation to the plane of the equator, is observed from
-these influences. It must be remembered that a very slight deviation
-in the angle can and would be detected by observation with modern
-instruments. We do find that this attraction affects the inclination of
-the ecliptic to the equator of 0´´.31 annually.
-
-This motion is entirely independent of the form of the earth. Now,
-if we assume that the sun and moon give the equinoctial points a
-retrograde motion on the ecliptic, we must deduct the influence of the
-planets. We may then calculate the mean disturbance by subtracting
-the latter from the former--the difference is settled by both theory
-and observation to be 50´´.1 annually. This motion of the equinoxes
-is called the precession of the equinoxes. Its consideration forms a
-very important element in the estimation of time, as the position of
-the various fixed stars, though so very distant, are all affected in
-longitude by this quantity of 50´´.1--being an increase of longitude.
-Therefore, if we were to calculate the position of any given star in
-order to get a transit for mean time, or true time, we must take this
-quantity into consideration. The increase is so great that the earliest
-astronomers, even with their imperfect modes of observation, detected
-it. Hipparchus, 128 years before Christ, compared his own observations
-with those of Timocharis, 153 years before. He found the solution of
-the problem the same as Diophantus found the solution of the squares
-and cubes, by analysis. In the time of Hipparchus, the sun was at a
-point 30° in advance of its present position, for it then entered into
-the constellation of Aries near the vernal equinox.
-
-At the present time the position of the equinoctial points shows a
-recession of the whole, 30° 1´ 40´´.2. At this rate of motion the
-constellations called the Signs of the Zodiac are some distance from
-the divisions of the ecliptic that bear their names. At the rate
-of 50´´.1 the whole revolution of the equinoctial points will be
-accomplished in 25,868 years; but this is again modified because the
-precession must vary in different centuries for the following reasons:
-the sun’s motion is direct, the precession retrograde; therefore, the
-sun arrives at the equator sooner than he does at the same star of
-observation. Now, the tropical year is 365d. 5h. 48´ 49´´.7; and as the
-precession is exactly 50´´.1, we must suppose it takes some time for
-the sun to move through that arc. By direct observation it is found
-that the time required for such translation is 20´ 19´´.6. By adding
-this amount to the tropical year we have the sidereal year of 365d.
-6h. 9´ 9´´.6 in mean solar days. This amount of precession has been
-on the increase since the days of its first recorder, Hipparchus, as
-the augmentation amounts to no less than 0.´´455. By adding that to the
-known precession we find that the civil year is shorter now by 4´´.21
-than in his time; but, as a great division of time, the year can be
-changed by this cause not more than 43.´´
-
-The action of the moon on the accumulation of matter at the earth’s
-equator is a source of disturbance that in very accurate observations
-for time should be eliminated. Thus the moon, with the conjoint action
-of the sun, depending on relative position, causes the pole of the
-equator to describe a small ellipse in the heavens with axes of 18´´.5
-for the major, and 13´´.674 for the minor; the longer axis being
-directed to the pole of the ecliptic. This inequality has a period
-of 19 years,--it being equal to the revolution of the nodes of the
-lunar orbit. The combination of these disturbances changes, by a small
-quantity, the position of the polar axis of the earth in regard to the
-stars, but not in regard to its own surface. With so many disturbing
-causes, we must add that of Jupiter, whose attraction is diminishing
-the obliquity of the ecliptic by 0´´.457 according to M. Bessel.
-
-The results of all these forces must affect the position of all the
-stars and planets as seen from our earth. Their longitudes being
-reckoned from the equinoxes, the precession of these points would
-increase the longitude; but as it affects all the stars and planets
-alike, it would make no real or apparent change in their relative
-positions. Nutation, however, affects the celestial latitudes and
-longitudes, as the real motion of the earth’s polar axis changes the
-relative positions. So great is the change that our present pole star
-has changed from 12° to 1° 24; in regard to the celestial pole, the
-gradual approximation will continue until it is with 0° 30´, after
-which it will leave the pole indefinitely until in 12,934 years α Lyræ
-will be the pole star.
-
-So far we have given only the causes that affect the meridian, and
-consequently our standard for time; but that point being established
-for the yearly and diurnal revolutions, it becomes necessary to find
-some means to divide the day into minute fractional parts, such as
-seconds and parts of seconds. This, it has been stated, is effected
-by means of an isochronous pendulum. On this instrument no comment is
-required but of the causes that disturb its accuracy much is needed.
-In 1672, at Cayenne, the astronomer Richter, while taking transits
-of fixed stars, found his clock lost 2´ 28´´ per day. This was an
-error that arrested his attention, and he immediately attributed it
-to some variation in the length of the pendulum--due to other causes
-than atmospheric changes and expansion. He determined the length of a
-pendulum beating seconds in that latitude, which was 5° N. in South
-America. He found that that pendulum was shorter than one beating
-seconds in Paris, by 0833+ of an inch. Now, if the earth was a sphere,
-the attraction of gravitation at all places on its surface would be
-equal, and the oscillations of a pendulum would also be equal, + or
-- the disturbing effect of centrifugal force--an amount that can be
-easily determined. The real reason of the variation is found in the
-configuration of the earth.
-
-The amount of the attraction of gravitation at any point of the earth’s
-surface is found by the distance traversed by any body during the
-first second of its fall. The pendulum is a falling body, and may be by
-the same analysis reasoned on that pertains to the laws of gravitation;
-the centrifugal force is measured by any deflection from a tangent to
-the earth’s surface in a second.
-
-It follows that the centrifugal force at the poles, where there is
-the least motion, would not be equal to the force of gravitation, and
-at the equator must be exactly equal; but the deflection of a circle
-from a tangent measures the intensity of the earth’s attraction, and
-is equal to the versed sine of the arc described during that time,
-the velocity of the earth’s rotation being known, the value of the
-arc is deducible. The centrifugal force at the equator is equal to
-¹⁄₂₈₉th part of the attraction of gravitation. Again, the uniformity
-of the earth’s mass becomes an object of consideration. Assuming that
-the figure of the earth is an ellipsoid of rotation, we will show the
-relation that form bears to the equal oscillation of a pendulum.
-
-Taking the earth as a homogeneous mass, analysis gives us the certainty
-that if the intensity of gravitation at the equator be taken as unity,
-the increase of gravity to the poles eliminating the differences of
-the centrifugal force must be = to 2.5, the ratio of the centrifugal
-force to that of gravitation at the equator. Now, taking the 2.5 of
-.346 = 1/115.2, this then must be the total increase of gravitation.
-Did we know the exact amount of increase at every point, from the
-equator to the poles, a perfect map of the form of the earth could
-be produced from calculation; experiment being from physical causes
-totally impracticable. The following analysis, quoted from an eminent
-physicist, gives a very lucid idea of the reasoning:
-
-“If the earth were a homogeneous sphere without rotation, its
-attraction on bodies on its surface would be everywhere equal. If it
-be elliptical and of variable density, the force of gravity ought to
-increase in intensity from the equator to the pole as _unity plus_
-a constant quantity multiplied into the square of the sine of the
-latitude. But for a spheroid in rotation the centrifugal varies by
-the law of mechanics, as the square of the sine of the latitude from
-the equator, where it is greatest, to the poles, where it is least.
-And as it tends to make bodies fly off the surface, it diminishes the
-force of gravity by a small quantity. Hence, by gravitation, which
-is the difference of these two forces, the fall of bodies ought to
-be accelerated from the equator to the poles proportionably to the
-square of the sine of the latitude, and the weight of the body ought to
-increase in that ratio.”
-
-Assuming the above reasoning to be correct, it follows, that the rate
-of descent of falling bodies will be accelerated in the transition
-from the equator to the poles. Now, it has been before stated that
-the pendulum is a falling body; therefore, with the same length of
-pendulum, the oscillations at the pole should be faster than at the
-equator. Theory, in this case, is verified; for it has been proved by
-experiments, repeated again and again, that a pendulum oscillating
-86,400 times in a mean day at the equator, will give the same number of
-oscillations at any other point, provided its length is made longer in
-the exact ratio as the square of the sine of the latitude.
-
-The sequence to be derived from all the foregoing considerations is,
-that the whole decrease of gravitation from the equator to the poles
-is 0.005.1449, which subtracted from the 1/155.2 gives the amount
-of compression of the earth to be nearly 1/285.26. But this form
-of the earth would give the excess of the equatorial axis over the
-polar about 26¹⁄₂ miles. The measurement is confirmed by Mr. Ivory
-in his investigations on the five principal measurements of arcs of
-the meridian in Peru, India, France, England, and Lapland. He found
-that the law required an ellipsoid of revolution whose equatorial
-radius should be 3,962.824 miles, and the polar 3,949.585 miles; the
-difference is 13.239 miles; this quantity multiplied by two gives
-26.478 as the excess of one diameter over the other. Thus, by two
-different processes the figure of the earth has been determined; but
-another remains that is the result of pure analysis, derived from the
-nutation and precession of the equinoxes--for, as explained before,
-these effects are caused by the excess of matter at the earth’s
-equator. The calculation does not lead us to certainty, but it does
-show the compression to be comprised between the two fractions ¹⁄₂₇₀
-and ¹⁄₅₇₃. There is this advantage in the lunar theory, that it takes
-the earth as a whole, disregarding any irregularities of surface, or
-the local attractions that influence the pendulum--the difficulties of
-measuring an arc of the meridian being an obstacle to perfect accuracy.
-
-The form of the earth has, however, a value confined not alone to those
-interested in horology--it furnishes us with a standard of weights and
-measures. In England and the United States, the pendulum is the unit of
-mensuration, or at least the common standard from which measurement is
-derived. It has been shown that, deducting the effects of nutation, the
-axis of the earth’s rotation is always in the same plane. Now, the mass
-being the same constant quantity, a pendulum oscillating seconds at the
-Greenwich Observatory, has been adopted by the English Government as
-its standard of length. Oscillating in vacuo at the level of the sea,
-at 62° Fahr., Captain Kater found its approximate length to be 39.1393
-inches; as this must be invariable under the same circumstances, it
-becomes a standard for all time. The French deduced their standard from
-the measurement of the ten-millionth part of a quadrant of the meridian
-passing through Formentera and Greenwich. They have also adopted the
-decimal system; yet it seems to prove that nothing under the sun is
-new, for over forty centuries ago the Chinese used the decimal system
-in the division of degrees, weights, and measures.
-
-The antiquity of the pendulum is also shown by the fact that the
-Arabs were in the habit of dividing the time in observations, by its
-oscillations, when Ibn Junis, in the year one thousand, was making
-his astronomical researches. Before we lose sight of the influence
-of the form of the earth on the pendulum, it may be well to state
-another source of disturbance, arising from the combined influence of
-the earth’s rotation and the fact that a body moving in its own plane
-seeks to maintain that plane. It will be seen from the very beautiful
-experiment showing the rotation of the earth, that if a body like a
-pendulum be suspended so as to be free in every direction, and not be
-influenced by the motion of the earth when set in oscillation in any
-plane, that that plane will preserve its line of motion, while the
-earth in its motion beneath the body can be seen to slowly move, as
-though the minute hand of a watch were made stationary while the dial
-revolved. The same principle is the one that maintains the spinning-top
-in a parallel position to the horizon, or the gyrascope in its
-apparently anomalous defiance of all the laws of gravitation. In the
-pendulum this tendency to preserve the same plane of motion becomes a
-cause of error--slight, it is true, but can be very easily remedied by
-so placing it that the plane of oscillation shall be parallel to the
-equator. It will be readily seen that this precaution will become more
-important as we recede from the equator; for if we were to suspend a
-pendulum at the pole in a true line with the axis of rotation, and if
-the plane of vibration remained constant, the earth would turn once
-around that plane in the diurnal period. During this time there would
-be a continuous torsion on the point of suspension, that would in time
-materially affect the accuracy of the instrument. The reasoning holds
-good for every latitude--degree of influence being the only difference.
-
-Having given the action of the earth’s form, mass, and rotation on
-the pendulum, there remain the disturbances due to expansion and
-contraction, owing to changes of temperature and those of atmospheric
-causes. The astronomical points to be observed are somewhat too fully
-laid down, but it must be remembered that an exact science requires the
-premises to be fully established before a sequence can be drawn.
-
-As the standard of time depends on the passage of a star or the sun, or
-any known celestial object, at a certain time across the meridian of
-the place where the observation is taken, it was absolutely necessary
-to give the modes of calculation, together with the disturbing causes.
-Moreover, a full appreciation of the indebtedness of horology to
-astronomy could not be obtained without a general knowledge of the
-change of the position of the major axis of the orbit described by the
-earth around the sun. Also, the difference between mean and apparent
-solar time was required to illustrate the use of the tables of equated
-time, the necessity of which will become patent when the use of the
-transit instrument for the establishment of time, or a fixed standard,
-is introduced. Also, the disturbing effects of the sun and moon
-collectively and relatively as to position, could not be passed, as
-they produce the precession of the equinoxes and the nutation of the
-pole--essential elements in the computation of time.
-
-
-
-
-Watch and Chronometer Jewelling.
-
-NUMBER ONE.
-
-
-This whole subject is well worthy an article both in a scientific and
-mechanical sense, whether we consider the delicacy of the operations
-or the intractable character of the material operated on--for there
-has been no improvement in the horological trade of more importance to
-accuracy and durability of time-keepers.
-
-The substitution of stone for common brass or gold bearings, was
-prompted by the inevitable wear of the holes from frequent cleaning,
-and the abrasion of the pivots, produced by the accumulation of
-dust with viscid oil; the pivot being cut away, or the hole opened
-too large. So long as the verge and cylinder were the prevailing
-escapements, the necessity for jewelling was not so strongly felt,
-except in the balance holes. The introduction of the lever escapement
-brought with it a better watch,--capable of more accurate time, but
-demanding an improved construction.
-
-An Italian, in 1723, first introduced the practice of using stone for
-bearings. He not only conceived the idea, but was successful as an
-artisan in making his own jewels; ingenious and skilful as he was,
-however, he encountered obstacles almost insurmountable.
-
-The art of cutting gems, it is true, was at that time well understood,
-but no one had attempted to drill a hole in a hard stone fine enough
-for a properly sized pivot. The watches at that time that were jewelled
-could boast of nothing more than the balance holes, and they were not
-pierced to let the pivot _through_.
-
-It is a very difficult matter to polish a taper indentation in a stone,
-even with modern appliances, in consequence of the tendency to create
-a _tit_ at the bottom,--thus throwing the balance staff out of upright.
-The difficulties in the then state of knowledge retarded the general
-introduction of stone-work for many years. The Swiss, however, seeing
-the advantages derived, finally struck out the various manipulations
-with success. Time and experience gave more skill, and at the present
-time it is impossible to find a Swiss watch, even of the cheapest
-class, that is not jewelled in at least four holes. The English trade
-adopted the art later; but even then it did not become general for many
-years. Within a generation, only fine English levers were jewelled.
-
-The mere substitution of a harder substance was not the only
-improvement; other conditions necessary to accuracy were insured. The
-hole could be made _round_--the material of such a character that no
-chemical action could be effected on the oil used for lubrication,
-and the vertical section of the hole could be made so as to present
-the least amount of frictional surface, yet still giving a perfectly
-polished bearing, thus avoiding the cutting of the pivot.
-
-The whole “_modus operandi_” from the stone in the rough to the last
-setting up is well worth the attention of the watch repairer, and
-certainly that of the manufacturer.
-
-Of the materials used in the trade, the first and most important is
-the diamond, used only in the time-piece as an end-stone--but at
-the bench all-important, as a means of making the other jewels. The
-diamond possesses the requisite susceptibility of polish, combined with
-greatest hardness of any substance known; but this adamantine quality
-precludes its being pierced with a through hole. Considered chemically,
-the diamond is pure carbon,--its different varieties differing only
-in structure--common charcoal, its lowest--plumbago, its intermediate
-grade. Another variety, called the “black diamond,” or “diamond
-carbon,” occurs, which is interesting as being a parallel with emery,
-compared with crystallic sapphire. The form of diamond most in use for
-mechanical manipulations, is almost always crystallized; yet it will be
-seen that the agglomerated form of diamond carbon plays no unimportant
-part in jewelling. As a jewel, no use is made of the diamond, other
-than as an end-stone. Marine chronometers, in which the balance will
-weigh from five to nine pennyweights, are almost invariably furnished
-with a diamond end-stone, set in steel. Yet, hard as the substance is,
-it is often that a pivot will cut an indentation in its face. The cause
-of this apparent anomaly is to be found in the structural character of
-the gem, and its value. The lapidary, saving in weight as possible,
-does not care, in “Rose Diamonds,” to pay attention to the lines of
-cleavage. If the face of the stone makes a slight angle with the
-strata of the jewel, there occur innumerable small angles of extreme
-thinness--the pivot, coming in contact with any of these thin portions,
-may fracture it, and the fragment, becoming imbedded in the tempered
-steel pivot, becomes a drilling tool. In our experience we have had
-marine chronometers sent for repair, that have lost their rate so much
-as to become utterly unreliable from this cause alone--the pivot having
-produced an indentation of the stone, creating more friction, and thus
-destroying the accuracy of the instrument.
-
-As a general rule, the rose diamonds sold for this purpose are
-sufficiently good for general work. In a very fine watch or chronometer
-the stone should be selected with reference to its polish on the face,
-and its parallelism in the lines of cleavage. The diamond, however,
-gets its great importance from being the only agent we can use in
-working other stones. Without it the whole art of jewelling would not
-be practicable. The various steps are all connected some way with
-diamond in its different shapes. “Bort,” the technical name for another
-variety, is merely fragments of the stone that have been cleaved off
-from a gem in process of cutting, or gems that have been cut, but found
-too full of flaws to become of use for ornamental jewelry purposes,
-the cost depending on the size, varying from $5.50 to $18 per carat.
-This “Bort” is used as turning tools--the larger pieces being selected
-and “set” in a brass wire and used on the lathe, in the same manner,
-and with the same facility, as the common graver. For tools, even
-the diamond is not of equal value--a pure white and crystalline in
-structure generally being too brittle (though hard) to endure the
-work. Among the workmen the “London smoke,” a clouded, brownish stone,
-is most prized--it possessing the twofold qualities of toughness and
-hardness.
-
-Another form of “Bort” comes in the shape of a small globule, sometimes
-the size of a pea; it is crystallic, and when fractured generally gives
-very small, indeed minute pieces of a needle shape. These are carefully
-selected, and form the drills with which the English hole-maker
-perforates the jewel. These drills, when found perfect, for soundness,
-form, and size, are very highly prized by the workman, as the choice of
-another, together with the setting, will often take a vast deal of time
-and labor.
-
-“Bort” is also used in the making of the laps or mills with which
-the jeweller reduces the stones to a condition for the lathe and
-subsequent processes. For this purpose such pieces as are not fit for
-cutting-tools, or drills, are selected. A copper disk, having been
-first surfaced and turned off in the lathe, is placed on a block or
-small anvil; each piece of stone is then separately placed on the
-copper, and driven in with a smart blow--care being taken that no place
-shall occur in the disk that does not present, in revolution, some
-cutting point. It would seem impossible to retain the diamond fragment,
-but it must be remembered that the copper, being a very ductile metal,
-receives the piece; the first rubbing of a hard stone then burnishes
-the burred edges of the indentations over every irregular face of the
-diamond, leaving only a cutting edge to project. The rapidity with
-which such a lap, well charged, will reduce the hardest stone, is
-somewhat marvellous. It is the first tool used in jewelling, and so
-important that a more detailed and explicit description of its make
-will be given when the process of manufacture is treated upon.
-
-Diamond powder is equally as important as “bort,” being used in nearly
-every stage of jewel-making. The coarsest charges the “skives” or
-saws used for splitting up the stone. These skives are made of soft
-sheet-iron, and act on the same principle as the laps. The finer
-grades, in bulk, resemble very much ordinary slate-pencil dust;
-indeed, the latter is often used as an adulteration. This powder is
-not uniform in fineness, and the jewel-maker is under the necessity of
-separating the different grades. This is effected by a simple process
-called “floating off,” and is conducted as follows: A certain quantity
-of powder, say a carat, is put into a pint of pure sweet oil, contained
-in some such shallow vessel as a saucer. Depending on the fluidity of
-the oil, the mixture, after being thoroughly incorporated, is allowed
-to stand undisturbed for about an hour or an hour and a half. During
-this time, owing to their greater gravity, the largest particles are
-precipitated, leaving held in suspension a powder of nearly uniform
-fineness. The mixture is now carefully decanted into another similar
-vessel, leaving the coarse powder at the bottom of the first. This
-coarse deposit is denominated No. 1, and is used for skives, laps, and
-other rough purposes. The decanted mixture in the second vessel is
-allowed to remain quiescent for twelve hours, when the same operation
-is performed; and the third vessel now contains most of the oil,
-together with the finest particles of powder. The precipitate from the
-second decantation is the ordinary opening powder; the finest being for
-polishing both the holes and outsides of jewels, and giving the final
-finish to the faces of pallets, roller pins, locking spring jewels, etc.
-
-The good workman is careful to keep the powder in this condition as
-free as possible from any extraneous dust, and above all to preserve
-the different grades from any intermixture, as a small quantity of a
-coarser grade would destroy a finer one for all its purposes, and the
-process of “floating off” would have to be repeated.
-
-The most important stone in jewelling, the diamond, becomes more of an
-agent of the manufacture than an object.
-
-Properly, for jewelling the ruby and sapphire are pre-eminent;
-inferior only to diamond in hardness, possessing a sufficient degree
-of toughness, susceptible of an exquisite polish, this (for they
-are one and the same) stone is the favorite of the Swiss, English,
-and American, for all high class work--the Swiss, however, using it
-indiscriminately in all watches.
-
-The ruby proper is of one color, but in its varieties of intensity
-may change to a very light pink. When still lighter it is ranked a
-sapphire, which comes in almost every possible color and shade, from
-ruby to a perfect transparent colorless crystal. This stone differs
-in degrees of hardness and capacity of working--the hardest being a
-greenish yellow, in the shape of pebbles, with very slightly rounded
-edges, difficult to work, but forming the strongest and most perfect
-jewel known.
-
-It must be remembered that this description gives the value of the ruby
-and sapphire as a material for jewelling only. For ornamental jewelry,
-the value depending on color, of the most intense ruby or blue for
-sapphire, together with brilliancy and weight. The ruby and sapphire
-are formed on an aluminum base, the common emery being another form of
-structural arrangement, but of the same chemical constitution.
-
-These stones possess every quality to make them the base of perfect
-jewelling; and still the chrysolite is equally in favor with most
-jewellers. It is not quite so hard, but it is more easily worked and
-cheaper in price, and it would be difficult to tell wherein it is
-inferior to either the ruby or sapphire. It has a yellowish tinge,
-verging to the color of the olive. As a stone for jewelry it is not
-fashionable, and only in Persia is it valued. There are, however, some
-very strong objections to its use by the workman; it is not uniform
-in hardness; in polishing it will _drag_, that is, the surface will
-tear up in the process. Unfortunately the eye is not able to detect
-the fault before working, and it is found only when much preliminary
-time and trouble has been expended. It is susceptible, when good, of a
-perfect polish, and is much used in chronometer work, especially for
-jewelling the 4th hole, as its non-liability to fracture renders it
-valuable.
-
-“Aqua Marine” is a brother to the emerald, differing from it only in
-intensity of color, and composed of the same constituents. These two
-gems are the only ones in which the rare metal, glucinum, has been
-detected. It is extensively used in the American and English watches,
-but never in the Swiss. It is soft, not much harder than quartz, but
-comes in large pieces, perfectly transparent, and of a color which
-is that pure green of sea-water, from which it takes its name, “Aqua
-Marine.”
-
-The garnet in English watches plays an important part for pallets, also
-for roller-pins; a very soft stone, but very porous. When set in the
-pallet with a pointed toothed wheel, it is apt to act as a file from
-its porosity, cutting the end of the tooth. This may be detected in any
-pointed tooth lever watch, by observing the color of the back of the
-tooth. “Black vomit” it used to be called in the Boston factory. Most
-of the garnet used is an Oriental stone, the best quality coming in
-bead form, the holes having been pierced by the natives. The cost of
-piercing the stone in Europe or America would be far above its value.
-The Oriental is the best for Horological purposes, though Hungary and
-Bohemia furnish the most highly prized stones used for ornamental
-purposes; indeed, in some German towns the cutting and setting of the
-garnet is a specialty, giving employment to a large number of people.
-And, strange to say, the best market for their sale is the United
-States.
-
-This comprises about all the stones used in watch and chronometer
-jewelling. Still in clock work the pallets are generally jewelled in
-agate, a stone not at all suited to the purpose, it having, even in
-the best specimens, a decided stratification that prevents an uniform
-surface being formed by any process. The cornelian form of the agate
-is not open to this objection, and makes capital bearings for knife
-edges of fine balances, and compass stones for centres of magnetic
-needles. For watch or chronometer purposes the only really useful
-stones are sapphire, ruby, chrysolite, and aqua marine--all possessing
-peculiarities that deserve some remarks, as they are of the utmost
-importance to the hole maker. The sapphire is the hardest stone, next
-to the diamond, and yet specimens can be, and are found, so soft as
-to _drag_ in polishing. Again, if stratified very clearly, will “fire
-crack” in opening the hole. The ruby is more uniform in its structure,
-and is more highly prized on that account; its hardness being all that
-is necessary, while its susceptibility of receiving a high polish
-is equal to that of the sapphire or chrysolite. The aqua marine is
-always uniform and may be polished both externally and in the hole with
-“tripoli,” saving something in diamond powder in the process of making.
-In our estimation, however, the chrysolite is the most valuable of all
-the stones. True, when purchased in the rough, many pieces will be
-found unfit for the jeweller’s purpose; but when the right quality is
-found, nothing can be better adapted to jewelling. Hard, it is easily
-wrought, taking a peculiar _unctious_ polish, retaining oil in its most
-limpid condition for a long time.
-
-These stones form the general stock by and from which jewels are made.
-The details of the various manufacturing manipulations, the tools
-used, also the setting in the work, together with the important item
-of the screws, will form the subject of the next article on Watch and
-Chronometer Jewelling. Not having been able to get our engraving done
-in time for publication, we are compelled to reserve the remainder for
-the next number.
-
-
-
-
-Hints on Clocks and Clock-Making.
-
-NUMBER ONE.
-
-
-Twenty-five years of hard labor amidst the dust and din of machinery,
-with hands cramped, and fingers stiffened by the continual use of
-tools, and with a brain constantly occupied in ringing the changes upon
-wheels and levers in their almost infinite combinations,--it requires a
-degree of courage to undertake to write anything that can be dignified
-with the name of an “article,” although it does propose to treat upon
-a subject with which we are fairly familiar; but it is consoling to
-think that one is not expected to write for the pages of this practical
-journal with the same degree of elegance and polish that should grace
-the columns of a review or magazine; that we can appear here as plain,
-practical mechanics, and use good hard, round words to express our
-ideas, backed by an experience which should add some weight--and we
-welcome the appearance of the “American Horological Journal,” which
-is to serve a good purpose by bringing out the actual experience of
-men who have grown gray in the art and mystery of clock-making, and
-preserving, by means of the “art preservative of all arts,” their
-dearly bought knowledge and experience, for the benefit of those who in
-their turn shall follow them; and it will also benefit the people in
-general by giving information that will lead to the purchase of good
-and tasteful clocks for household use.
-
-That such a journal is needed to enlighten us, is made plain by the
-fact that in almost every newspaper we have a vivid account of some
-wonderful clock “recently invented,” which may possess some merit, but
-they are so grossly exaggerated by some ignorant “penny-a-liner,” that
-we are almost led to believe in the Irishman’s marvellous “eight-day
-clock, that actually ran three weeks.” Even the proverbially correct
-“Scientific American,” of which I am a constant reader, has in its
-issue of June 19th, an account in its “editorial summary” of a clock in
-France containing “90,000 wheels,” and perhaps the most curious part
-of the mechanism is that which gives “the additional day in leap-year,”
-etc. Now, it will require but little knowledge of clocks to tell us
-that one with 90,000 wheels was never made and never will be, but “the
-additional day in leap-year” has been given by calendar clocks in this
-country since the year 1853.
-
-It is not proposed in the series of articles to follow, to discuss
-the early history of clocks. Reid and Dennison have written enough
-to convince the most skeptical that the clock is an old invention.
-It is not important to us who invented the pendulum, or this or that
-escapement, but who makes the best pendulum, the best escapement, the
-most perfect train of wheels and pinions. These are vital points, and
-we shall endeavor to give them that attention that their importance
-demands. It is proper to state here that any assertion made, or rule
-given, has been tested, and is the result merely of our experience,
-and we do not claim that it is all there is of the subject; for we are
-aware that the experience of others may have led to results entirely
-different; but if all clock-makers will avail themselves of the columns
-of this journal, we shall not only become better acquainted by an
-exchange of ideas, but better clock-makers.
-
-The subject of wheels and pinions is of the greatest importance in
-clock-making, and the utmost care and skill are required to execute a
-train which shall not only run with as little friction as possible,
-but the friction must be equal; for if there is no variation in the
-train force, the escapement and pendulum will always be actuated by the
-same amount of power, and the performance of the clock can be relied
-upon. Clock text-books do not fully impress this subject. We find a
-great deal upon this or that escapement, and the different pendulums.
-Dennison has a couple of pages full of abstruse calculations upon a
-method of shifting an extra weight upon a rod, so that the going of a
-clock can be varied one second per day; but if his wheels and pinions
-are not perfect, a large tooth here and there will vary the clock more
-than that.
-
-Reid overawes us with his knowledge of the proper curves of the teeth
-of wheels; but it must have been only theory, for his practice was to
-saw his teeth, and his cycloids, epicycloids, and hypocycloids were
-left to the mercy of the “topping file” in the hands of his “wheel
-teeth finishers,” instead of shaping up the teeth in the engine, as is
-done now. We have generally cut the wheels of fine clocks over several
-times with different cutters before taking them from the engine; the
-last cutter having but one tooth, which can be made perfect as to cut
-and shape, and, running with great speed, will leave the teeth the
-proper shape, very smooth, and as true as the dial of the engine.
-Escape wheels, especially, require great care in cutting, as the
-teeth for dead-beat escapements are somewhat long and thin; the least
-inaccuracy is certain to cause trouble. It is absolutely necessary that
-the dial plate of the cutting engine should be perfectly true, with
-clean, round holes, and a perfect fitting index point, with a cutter
-arbor without end play or lateral motion--these are the essentials of a
-good cutting engine, without which a good clock cannot be made.
-
-We have generally made a practice, upon the completion of the train for
-a fine clock, to put in the place of the escape-wheel a very light,
-well-balanced fly, to prevent “backlash,” and a very fine soft cord
-on the barrel; then hang on a very light weight; so slight that--all
-of the wheels being balanced, and no oil upon the pivots--the fly
-will move so slowly that its revolutions may be counted. By taking
-care that the weight be not too much in excess of the resistance, the
-least inaccuracy in the wheels and pinions may be discovered by the
-difference in the velocity of the fly, or by its suddenly stopping,
-which will be occasioned by any inequality in the train teeth, which
-would not have been discovered by the closest scrutiny. It was by means
-of this test that we discovered an inaccuracy in a pinion, caused by
-hardening, which could not have been discovered by a less delicate test.
-
-The wheels in the train should be as light as possible, for as the
-whole train is stopped every time a tooth drops on the pallets, it is
-plain that the driving weight must overcome the inertia as well as the
-friction of the train at every beat. To this end it has been customary
-to “arm out” the wheels, leaving a very light rim supported by light
-arms, the wheels being generally of cast brass, turned up, and cut,
-then lightened. We followed this plan for some time, but abandoned it,
-as we found great difficulty in making a perfectly round wheel. The
-arms serve as posts to support the rim in cutting or turning, but the
-space between is very apt to spring down. We prefer making the wheels
-of fine hard-rolled sheet brass; it is superior to cast brass, much
-finer, harder, and more durable, and is freer from flaws. After the
-wheels are cut, they are turned out on each side, leaving a thin web in
-the centre; they can be made lighter, finished easier, and are round.
-
-As to the shape of the teeth in clock-wheels, the subject has been so
-ably treated by Reid, Dennison, and Prof. Willis (who has invented an
-instrument to assist in laying out the curves for the teeth of wheels),
-that we shall not attempt it in this paper; besides, there is so little
-of the entire theory that can be applied to a clock-wheel of two and
-a half inches in diameter, with 120 to 140 teeth, farther than to
-leave the wheel and pinion of the proper diameter, that we consider it
-unnecessary; for if makers of regulators and other fine clocks will
-use pinions of 16 or 20 teeth, the friction or driving is all after the
-line of centres, and the whole subject of cycloids, epicycloids, and
-hypocycloids is reduced to a very small point, and might be said to
-“vanish into thin air.”
-
-Having given only a few practical hints, and not yet crossed the
-threshold of the subject, we propose to continue from month to
-month--if the readers of the JOURNAL do not weary--the discussion of
-the various parts that go to make the sum total of a fine clock, with
-notices of the various clocks made in this country.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It certainly comes within the province, and is the duty, of a journal
-devoted to Horology, to make a note of any and all the new improvements
-that pertain to the science. We give, then, some few, the merits of
-which have struck us as being a very important matter of consideration.
-
-The best clock time-keeper is not absolutely perfect, so its rate must
-be kept; but the watchmaker ordinarily has no means of correcting the
-error of his regulator, until the accumulation renders it a serious
-inconvenience. Did he possess a Transit instrument, properly set and
-adjusted for meridian, together with the required books and knowledge
-of observing, he could from day to day correct his clock and keep
-accurate time; but these are all expensive, as well as involving time
-and labor. Suited to the wants of the artisan is a little instrument
-called the Dipleidescope; simple in its construction, and not liable
-to get out of position or order, it forms the best substitute for the
-transit we have seen. It is founded on the theory that the double
-reflection from the two surfaces of planes at an angle of 60° will
-coincide when the object reflected is in a true line with half the base
-of the whole triangle. Having a prism cut in an equilateral triangle,
-one angle is set directly down toward the centre of the earth, the base
-being brought parallel with the line of the horizon. Now, if the axis
-of the prism is in a line with the meridian, a reflection of the sun
-will appear, at the instant of crossing the meridian, on itself--that
-is, there would be but one image. If the instrument is well made,
-there can be no doubt of its accuracy and value to those who, wishing
-to verify their time, are not situated so as to use a transit.
-
-Another improvement is a Bench-Key for watchmaker’s use. No one who has
-had any experience at the bench but will appreciate an article that
-facilitates the setting of time-pieces for his customers. In winding,
-it is equally valuable. It is not dependent for its strength of torsion
-on the spring-chuck principle, the power being applied close to the
-square by means of a pin that passes through the key.
-
-Hall’s Patent Cutting Nippers are a positive desideratum; a large
-wire can be cut off without the least jar to the hand, the leverage
-is so great. The smallest sizes are suitable to the ordinary run
-of watch-work, and can be used in clock-work better than any
-cutting-plyers extant. Strong and durable, they possess one quality
-that all watchmakers will appreciate--if a cutting-jaw is broken it can
-be replaced by another.
-
-
-
-
-Greenwich Observatory.
-
-
-About two hundred years ago, England began to take a lead in the
-mercantile commerce of the world; her ships were daily passing across
-the Atlantic, and India also was beginning to attract her attention.
-It was therefore of the utmost importance that navigators should be
-enabled to find their longitude when at sea, independently of watches
-or clocks; and a reward was offered to any one who should discover a
-method by which this result might be obtained.
-
-The plan proposed was, that the angular distance of the moon from
-certain stars should be calculated beforehand, and published, so that,
-for example, it might be stated that at ten minutes and five seconds
-past nine on such a day, the moon should be distant from Mars 40
-degrees. If from a ship in the middle of the Atlantic, Mars and the
-moon were found to be 40 degrees apart, then it would be known that the
-time in England was ten minutes and five seconds past nine.
-
-Here, then, was one item ascertained, and the method was a good one;
-but in consequence of the want of accuracy as regarded the moon’s
-motions, and the exact positions of the stars, it could not be
-practically carried out.
-
-Under these circumstances, Charles II. decided that a national
-observatory should be built, and an astronomer appointed; and a site
-was at once selected for the building. Wren, the architect, selected
-Greenwich Park as the most suitable locality, because from thence
-vessels passing up and down the Thames might see the time-signals,
-and also because there was a commanding view north and south from
-the hill selected for the site. The observatory was completed in
-1676, and Flamsteed, the chief astronomer, immediately commenced his
-observations, but with very imperfect instruments of his own. During
-thirty years, Flamsteed labored indefatigably, and formed a valuable
-catalogue of stars, and made a vast collection of lunar observations.
-He was succeeded by Halley, who carried on similar observations; and
-from that time to the present, Greenwich Observatory has been our
-head-quarters for astronomical observations.
-
-The work carried on at Greenwich is entirely practical, and consists
-in forming a catalogue of stars and planets, and so watching them
-that every change in their movements is at once discovered. Now that
-this work has been performed for several years, the movements of the
-principal celestial bodies have been so accurately determined, that the
-_Nautical Almanac_--the official guide on these subjects--is published
-four years in advance, and thus we find that on a particular night in
-1868, the moon will be at a certain angular distance from a star, and
-the second satellite of Jupiter will disappear at a particular instant.
-On the exterior wall of the observatory there is a large electric
-clock, which, being placed in “contact” with the various other clocks
-in the observatory, indicates exact Greenwich time. The face of this
-clock shows twenty-four hours, so that it requires that a novice should
-look at it twice before comparing his watch. On the left of this clock
-are metal bars let into the wall, each of which represents the length
-of a standard measure, such as a yard, foot, etc. And let us here say
-a few words about these standards. To the uninitiated a yard is simply
-three feet, and a foot is twelve inches--an inch being, we are told in
-our “Tables,” the length of three barleycorns. Now, as the length of
-a barleycorn varies considerably, it requires something more definite
-than this to determine our national measures. Thus, the question, what
-_is_ a foot? is more difficult to answer than at first sight appears.
-Many years ago the French perceived the difficulty appertaining to the
-national standard, and they, therefore, decided that a metre should be
-the ten-millionth part of one-fourth of the earth’s circumference--that
-is, ten-millionth of the distance from the Equator to the Pole. But
-here another difficulty was encountered, because different calculators
-found this arc of different lengths. By _law_, however, it was decided
-that one measurement only was correct, and so the metre was fixed at
-3.0794 Paris feet; though since then, more accurate observations and
-improved instruments have shown these measured acres to have been
-very incorrectly ascertained, and thus the French method failed when
-practically tried.
-
-The length of a seconds pendulum oscillating in a certain latitude has
-been our method of obtaining a standard; but this also has its weak
-points, so that to obtain a constant standard it is necessary to have
-some pattern which is unchangeable, and thus a metal has been chosen
-that expands or contracts but little either with heat or cold; and
-this, at a certain temperature, is _the_ standard measure, and such a
-standard may be seen on the exterior wall of Greenwich Observatory.
-
-On entering the doorway--which is guarded by a Greenwich pensioner,
-who will possibly first peep at the visitor, in order to see who
-the individual may be who is desirous to tread within the sacred
-precincts--one finds a court-yard, on the left of which are the
-transit-room, the computing-room, and the chronometer-room. The
-transit room takes its name from the instrument therein, which is
-a large “transit.” This consists of a large telescope, the outside
-of which is not unlike a heavy cannon, as it is of solid iron. The
-instrument is supported by trunnions, which allow the telescope to be
-elevated or depressed to point south or north, and, in fact, to make
-a complete revolution, but never to diverge from the north or south
-line. The magnifying power of this instrument is not very great, so
-that it admits plenty of light, for it is intended, not as a searcher
-for or for gazing at celestial objects, but for the purpose of noting
-the exact time at which stars and planets pass south or north of
-Greenwich. Upon looking through this telescope, the observer’s eye
-is first attracted by a vertical row of what seem to be iron bars,
-placed at equal distances from each other. These, however, prove to be
-only spiders’ webs, and are used for the purpose of taking the time
-of passage of a star over each wire, and thus to ascertain the exact
-instant of its being in the centre of the telescope. During even the
-finest and calmest nights, there is occasionally found a tremulousness
-in the instrument, which, as it is rigidly fixed to the walls of the
-building, must be due to a slight vibration in the ground itself. Thus,
-many a feeble earthquake unfelt by the outsider may be perceived by the
-astronomer by the aid of his delicate instruments.
-
-The various stars seem to be travelling at an immense rate when
-seen in the field of the transit telescope, and it is really nervous
-work noting the exact time when each wire is passed. The experienced
-observer, however, not only will give the minute and second, but also
-the decimal of a second when the star was on the wire. The result is
-obtained by counting the beats of a clock the face of which is opposite
-the observer. Thus, if at three the star seems as much short of the
-wire as at four it had passed it, then 3.5 might be the instant of
-“transit.”
-
-At noon each day the sun’s passage is observed by nearly the whole
-staff of observers. One individual looks through the telescope, and
-gives the time for each wire, while others examine a variety of
-micrometers in order to ascertain the fractional parts of seconds,
-etc.,--these micrometers being placed at the side of the instrument.
-
-In the morning, the principal work consists in making what are termed
-the “reductions” to the observations of the previous night. These
-reductions are the corrections requisite for the slight instrumental
-inaccuracy, for the refraction of the atmosphere, and for the known
-constant error of the observer. When, therefore, a bright winter’s
-night has occurred, the work on the following morning is usually very
-heavy. At noon the sun’s time of transit is taken, and at one o’clock
-the “ball” is dropped, by means of which the various vessels in the
-Docks and in the Thames set their chronometers, or ascertain their
-rate. In addition to this, the time is sent by electricity to Deal and
-one or two other seaports, in order that every vessel may be able to
-know the accurate time, if within sight of those places.
-
-Not the least interesting portion of the observatory is the chronometer
-room. For a very small charge, manufacturers or owners may have their
-chronometers rated at Greenwich, which is accomplished in the following
-manner:
-
-The chronometer is placed in the chronometer room, and compared with
-the large electric clock in the room, this clock being kept in order
-by the stars. Each day the chronometer is examined, and thus its rate
-is ascertained in its then temperature. It is afterwards placed in a
-sort of closet warmed by gas, a condition supposed to represent the
-tropics, and it is there kept for a certain period, being tested each
-day as before. This change of temperature is found to produce very
-little effect on the best instruments, which, when they have passed
-the ordeal, are returned to the owners with their character ticketed
-to them. Some hundred chronometers are often placed in this room; and
-to compare them is a science, the “expert” by a glance discovering the
-difference between the two instruments, whilst a novice would require
-to mentally add or subtract, and thus slowly to arrive at the same
-results.
-
-As soon as it becomes dark enough to see stars by the aid of a
-telescope, one of the staff commences his observations. These are
-continued during the night; and a register is kept of each star,
-planet, comet or moon, which is “doctored” in the morning by the
-computers.
-
-As all mortals are fallible, it is desirable to bring machinery into
-use where possible, and this has been managed in connection with
-astronomical observations. Instead of the computer registering by
-judgment the time of a star’s transit over the various wires, he
-strikes a small indicator, which, completing the electric circuit,
-causes a pricker to fall and make a hole in a piece of paper that
-is attached to a slowly revolving barrel. Each time the star passes
-a wire, the pricker descends and leaves its mark; and the interval
-between these marks being measured by scale, the mean time of transit
-may be obtained.
-
-There is usually a feeling of the sublime that comes over us when we
-reflect upon the vast unexplored regions of space, or contemplate the
-stellar world that shines upon us. The magnitude and grandeur of some
-of the planets in the solar system strike us with a feeling of awe
-and wonder, while we are puzzled at the mysteries attending comets,
-double stars, nebulæ, etc. No such feelings or sentiments, however,
-are allowed to enter into the constitution or mind of an observer at
-Greenwich. Saturn, the glorious ringed planet, with its galaxy of
-moons, is simply “Saturn, Right Ascension 10 hours 8 min. 12 sec.,
-North declination 16° 12´ 2´´.” Anything appertaining to the physical
-constitution, the probable cause of the ring, or the object of so
-grand an orb, does not come within the range of the observations at
-Greenwich, which are limited to bare matter-of-fact business work.
-
-The southern portion of the observatory ground is devoted to
-the investigation of meteorological subjects, and is under the
-superintendence of Mr. Glaisher, who is now well known as an aerial
-voyager. It is here that an exact record is kept of the amount of
-rain that daily falls, of the direction and force of the wind, of
-the magnetic changes, of the temperature, amount of ozone, etc.--all
-matters which may, and probably will, lead us eventually to the
-discovery of some laws connected with the states of weather, and enable
-us to predict what may be expected from day to day. Whilst we are now
-able to calculate to a few seconds, and for years in advance, the
-instant when an eclipse may occur, and to explain the causes of the
-various planetary movements, yet we are in a sad state of ignorance
-as regards the causes of hurricanes, thunder-storms, continued rains
-and droughts; and thus we find that all the would-be prophets who
-from time to time spring up and oracularly announce a coming frost
-or fine weather, or the reverse, are perpetually meeting with most
-signal failures, which, however, does not deter future adventurers from
-attempting to gain a cheap temporary renown by trying their luck at a
-prophecy.
-
-The perpetual accumulation of facts at Greenwich, whether these be of
-an astronomical nature, or appertaining to the air we breathe and its
-subtle changes, is a proceeding that must eventually lead us on to a
-correct knowledge of the laws which govern these matters, and also keep
-us acquainted with any variations that may be occurring in the elements
-that surround us.
-
-The order and quietness necessary in such calculations as those carried
-on at Greenwich prevent it from being a “show” establishment, and
-hence visitors are not admitted except on special business. Then,
-however, every aid and assistance are offered to the student and
-inquirer; the use of books and instruments is freely given, and such
-information supplied as the little spare time of those belonging to the
-establishment enables them to afford. Thus a visit to or a period of
-study at Greenwich Observatory will amply repay those who wish to gain
-the latest and most accurate information on astronomical subjects, or
-to practise themselves at the adjustments and use of the instruments;
-and to those who have not such opportunity, we offer this slight sketch.
-
- [_Chambers’ Journal._
-
-
-
-
-Pinions.
-
-
-Well made as to truth of centring, of division, of form of leaves, and
-polish, are, as the trade well knows, of vital importance to the value
-of the time-piece.
-
-The making and finishing is one of the most troublesome, as well
-as most expensive of all the processes in watch work. The nature
-of the material renders it difficult as it approaches so nearly in
-hardness to the tools used in cutting. In the ordinary Yankee clock,
-the _lantern pinion_ has entirely superseded the solid leaf, which
-substitution was the greatest element of success in their cheap
-construction. The lantern pinion is really a nearer approximation to
-the required anti-frictional form than a majority of cut pinions in
-ordinary clocks. In the process of manufacture of the cut variety, the
-first consideration is the quality of the steel to be used. For this
-purpose it should be carefully selected by trial, thus ascertaining
-its fineness, uniformity, softness when annealed, together with its
-capacity for taking a good temper, with the least amount of springing
-during the hardening process. Very few pinions are cut from the solid
-piece--the drawn pinion wire being quite good enough, when milled and
-finished, for the ordinary run of watch work.
-
-The steel wire having been selected, the first process is to cut it
-up in lengths a trifle larger than the required pinion. The separated
-pieces are then centred with care, and having been placed in a lathe,
-the staff and pivot are turned up to nearly the required gauge, leaving
-a portion of the whole piece the full size for the leaves. They are
-now taken to the milling tool to have the proper form given to the
-leaves. As this form is of the highest importance, it may be as well to
-give here the reasons. Supposing a wheel of 60 teeth, depthing into a
-pinion of 8 leaves, it can readily be seen that the arc of the motion
-of the wheel tooth is of greater radius than that of the leaf of the
-pinion, and it follows that if the teeth and the leaves are made in
-taper form with straight sections, there must occur a sliding motion
-on the surfaces of both--the power thus absorbed being totally wasted;
-but if we curve the surfaces we may approach a form so nearly perfect
-that the wheel teeth, being motors, really roll on the leaves, avoiding
-almost entirely the friction caused by sliding; the necessity for this
-curvature becoming greater the more the wheel exceeds the pinion in
-diameter. This curve, which has been demonstrated by very profound
-mathematical researches, is the “epicycloidal;” theoretically it should
-give no more sliding motion than the surfaces of two plain wheels
-revolving on each other. To obtain this perfect form, very great pains
-have been taken and expenses incurred, especially by the makers of the
-best time-keepers.
-
-In the American factories the cutters are very elaborately made,
-the section being an object of great solicitude--it being an exact
-counterpart of the space between any two leaves, and also of one-half
-the top of the leaf from the curvature to the point, so that in
-milling, the space made by the cutter is its shape, leaving the leaf
-of the proper form. Generally the pinion passes under two cutters; the
-first to strike down the rough stock, the other to dress it to size and
-shape, with a light cut. The care and skill required to make these is
-certainly very great, and it is a proof of the wonderful ingenuity of
-man that they are made so perfect as to shape and cutting power.
-
-A very ingenious device is used for dividing the leaves under the
-cutter, which revolves at a moderate speed over a slide, carrying a
-pair of centres, between which the turned up piece of pinion wire is
-placed. The slide is now pushed up to and under the cutter, and in
-its passage as much of a cut is taken as is desirable; in drawing
-back the slide the fresh cut space passes under a flat piece of thin
-steel, screwed on the frame, and set at a slight angle to the axis of
-the centres. On moving the slide towards the cutter for a fresh cut,
-the steel plate takes the last cut, and in passing by it the pinion
-is turned just as much as the angularity of the plate, which must be
-just one leaf. By this very clever device the division is effected
-without an index plate. This process, however, is not good enough for
-work intended to be very accurate--the pinion wire not being always, or
-indeed rarely correctly divided, the original error will be perpetuated
-in all the subsequent processes. These are all milled, with oil or soda
-water for a lubricator, and it follows that the speed of the cutter is
-regulated to get the greatest cut without dulling the tool. When dull,
-however, the mill is sharpened on the _face_ of the cutting tooth by
-means of small grinders of iron, using Arkansas oil-stone dust for the
-first grinding, and giving the necessary delicacy of the edge by means
-of crocus, or sharp, followed, when fine work is needed, by rouge.
-
-It is necessary that this care should be taken, for if the edge is
-left coarse it will become speedily dulled, and leave a very unequal
-and rough surface on the cut of the pinion, which in the subsequent
-grinding gives rise to error in shape and size. The pinions, thus cut
-to gauge, are dried in sawdust, hardened, and tempered; the staff and
-pivots are now turned up to size, and then pass to the polishers. In
-the factory they are finished by means of what are called _Wig-Wags_,
-which it may be interesting to the reader to have a general description
-of.
-
-Two Vs are arranged as centres, the pinion is placed between them,
-the circular parts resting in each V, but free to turn on its own
-axis. Immediately above the Vs is a frame on which a slide, carrying
-the polisher, may traverse--generally about two inches. This slide is
-movable vertically so as to accommodate itself to the pinion; attached
-to the slide is a connection which leads to a vertical lever, which
-is put in motion from a crank on the counter shaft. The grinding is
-effected by bringing the grinder, charged with oil-stone dust in oil,
-in one of the spaces of the pinion, which, of course, is so arranged
-as to bring it parallel and central with the grinder. The power being
-applied, the slide takes a very rapid reciprocatory motion, and the
-face of the grinder, so charged, rapidly reduces the uneven surface
-left by the cutter to what is called the _gray_.
-
-The form of this grinder must be as perfect as the cutters, and the
-care taken to get the requisite parallelism is in equal proportion,
-and in all the best polishers is planed up while in its position. The
-grinder is composed of tin and lead, with sometimes a slight admixture
-of antimony, rolled to an even thickness, cut off in suitable lengths,
-and then mounted in the carrier of the Wig-Wag to be planed up to
-shape. There are too many minute adjustments in the machine to render a
-full description in this article admissible. It is large compared with
-the work it has to perform, but it is very admirably made, as indeed
-all the tools are, in the American factories.
-
-The polishing of the leaves is the next step, and this is effected by
-means precisely the same as grinding. In each stage the pinions are
-thoroughly cleansed before entering on another. The polisher is made
-precisely like the grinder; but instead of oil-stone dust, crocus mixed
-with oil is substituted. Owing to the less cutting quality of the
-material used, the polisher loses its form sooner than the grinder,
-and has to be more frequently reshaped. In very fine work the crocus
-is succeeded by fine well-levigated rouge to bring up that jet black
-polish, which is considered a mark of quality by chronometer and watch
-makers.
-
-With the exception of turning up the staff and pivots, all the work
-hitherto described has been expended on the leaves--a very tedious
-process, yet done, when the tools and materials are in proper order,
-with marvellous rapidity; but tedious as these have been, there are two
-others quite as much so before the leaves are finished.
-
-The ends are to be faced--they must be flat (that is a true plane) and
-receive the same finish that the leaves took, and is effected by the
-wig-wag; only the pinion revolves between centres, at a high speed, the
-grinder being brought up to the turned face. Two motions operate--one
-rectilinear, the other circular--the result being a compound motion
-which prevents the grinder from touching the same spot twice in
-succession. To effect this more surely, the operator gives the grinder
-a slight vibratory vertical motion. The polishing of the two faces is
-effected in the same manner as the grinding; in all cases the cutting
-face of the grinders and polishers being kept in a plane perpendicular
-to the axis of the pinion, both vertical and horizontal.
-
-The staff and pivots being in the same condition they came from the
-lathe, the next step is to grind and polish them. Before, however, we
-treat on this process, it may not be amiss to give the general watch
-repairer a process by which the facing may be done on a small scale.
-
-As a rule, when the watch repairer has to replace a pinion he selects
-one from the material dealer, finished in the leaves, but not on the
-ends or faces. The following operations are simple, and any one may
-finish these faces with little trouble. Having turned up your pivots
-and squared down the face of the leaves with the turning tool, grind
-it in the lathe by means of a ring of metal, the inside diameter being
-somewhat larger than the diameter of the staff. This ring is held
-between two centres, thus allowing it a vibratory motion, so that
-when it comes up to the face it accommodates itself to its plane, and
-thus has no tendency to force it out of a true flat; the ring, being
-larger than the staff or pivot, admits a small lateral motion, enough
-to effect a continuous change of surface. The same little tool may be
-used for polishing by substituting another polisher and using crocus
-and rouge. For the repairer, perhaps on general work the rouge would
-be superfluous. Vienna lime, used with a little slip of boxwood,
-brings up a very fine and brilliant polish, and in replacing new work
-in an injured time-piece, the steel may always be polished with great
-rapidity by using the lime on the gray surface left from the oil-stone
-dust; being quickly done and affording a very handsome finish.
-
-To resume the consideration of the pinion, the last stage is the
-polishing of the circular portions. Here again the wig-wag is the
-most useful tool, but it operates somewhat differently, for the
-grinder or polisher is pressed down by the finger of the operator,
-the pinion being held between the centres of a small lathe attached
-to the wig-wag; the staff is first ground and polished as the leaves
-have been before, and this is the last operation performed with the
-pinion between centres. From this stage it is chucked in a lathe very
-peculiarly fitted, the mandrel being hollow; and in it is fitted what
-is called a pump-centre, which is movable in direction of the axis of
-the mandrel, and capable of being securely fastened at any desired
-point. On the nose of the mandrel is secured a hollow steel chuck,
-the two sides of which have been filed out, thus leaving an open
-space between the end of the pump-centre and the end of the chuck. On
-this end a small steel plate, extremely thin, is fastened by means
-of shellac, and a hole drilled in the plate capable of taking in the
-chamfer on the shoulder of the pivot. The pump-centre being drawn
-back, the pinion is introduced into the chuck, the pivot placed in the
-hole in the steel plate, and the pump centre is drawn forward until
-it forces the chamfer to fill the hole; the pivot projecting from
-the chuck is now ready for all the grinding and polishing processes.
-Here the wig-wag steps in again, and from the delicacy of the pivots
-is modified to suit the case; this is done by having a polisher hung
-in the wig-wag on centres, so it may revolve; when in operation one
-side of the polisher rests on the pivot, the other on a ruby placed
-in a screw, and which screw enables the operative to insure the
-parallelism of the pivot. The ends of the pivots are next rounded off
-and finished in another set of tools. The pinion is now ready for use,
-assuming it to be of the proper gauge. In the American watches the
-scape and fourth wheels are generally staked on the staff pinch tight;
-the third and centre are staked on the pinion leaves, a rebate having
-been turned down on the ends, the wheel set on the shoulder, and the
-projecting ends of the leaves riveted down. This has not been designed
-as an exhaustive article on pinions; it is merely intended to open the
-subject as pursued in the factories. There is much more to be said; and
-the various processes on the small scale, as performed by the Swiss
-and English, together with their tools, will bear more than a general
-description, as they are applicable at any watch bench.
-
-The subject will be continued, in the effort to give a full and useful
-article.
-
-
-
-
-New Three-Pin Escapement.
-
-
-A contributor to the _London Horological Journal_ gives the following
-description of his invention:
-
- “The merit of this escapement is in a newly invented escape-wheel
- which is self-locking and requires no banking pins; the pallets are
- curved inside the impulse and outside the locking, to work with the
- curved points of the teeth of the wheel; being made of gold the wheel
- will go without oil. From its form it has the power of double impulse
- and double locking with the lever. The first takes place at the
- discharge of the escapement, the second does not act unless the watch
- receives a sudden motion, and then the pin or pallet in the roller
- strikes lightly on the lever, when the propellant power drives it back
- again. The balance passes through two turns before the second locking
- takes place, and is formed so as to be able to take up the lever,
- and the watch soon rights itself, and its time will not be affected.
- Another advantage is, that the lever is made of a flat piece of steel,
- as I have introduced a gold stud to receive the ruby impulse stone,
- which is made to adjust easily so as to bring the escapement to the
- closest geometrical accuracy. By its formation this ruby guides the
- impulse to the external edge of the roller notch. These advantages,
- and its simplicity, render it suitable to the best chronometer
- watches.”
-
-A FEW years ago, in 1859 or ’60, Mr. Peabody, a very talented
-gentleman of this city, patented a three-pin escapement that performed
-extremely well. A full description of his patent and plan is not at
-hand, but we will endeavor to give it to our readers in our next issue.
-
-
-
-
-English Opinion of American Watch Manufacture.
-
-
-In the London circle of Horologists, more attention is paid to the
-scientific departments than the mercantile; but for all that, a Mr.
-Henry Ganney has held forth before the “British Horological Institute,”
-on “American Watch Manufacture.” Though an Englishman, with English
-prejudices, he certainly gives a very fair and impartial statement
-of the subject; yet he views it almost entirely in the money-making
-aspect. He gives all the credit deserved to American enterprise and
-ingenuity, and yet there is a certain sense of a drawback. He had
-before him samples of machine work; among others, to quote, “several
-movements made by the British Watch Company, which flourished and
-failed about twenty-five years ago; these were machine-made, and the
-perfection and completeness of the machinery they used for producing
-these frames has not been equalled, I believe, in America; several
-machines being used there to accomplish what was begun and completed by
-one here.”
-
-Mr. Ganney is right in his statement, but the example given by the
-British Watch Company was the rock seen by the American navigators. One
-tool, for facing off, truing up, drilling, depthing, and doing all the
-work on the pillar plate, having cost, before completion, some three
-thousand pounds sterling, and from its very complexity being utterly
-inefficient--worse than useless. In the very inception of the American
-watch manufacture a similar mistake was almost made. Experience and
-sound reasoning proved, however, that a multiplicity of operations in
-any one machine rendered it entirely too complex, the adjustments too
-numerous, and the work totally worthless. We shall in another number
-refer again to Mr. Ganney’s lecture, and perhaps give some beamings of
-light on the early history of the American watch manufacture, derived
-from personal observation at the time.
-
-
-
-
-Correspondence.
-
-
- EDITORS HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL:
-
- I received a Prospectus a few days ago advising me of your
- contemplated existence. I could hardly believe the fact; “the news
- was too good to be true.” However, I shall take it for granted, for I
- cannot see why somebody has not before had the enterprise to launch
- out in the periodical line on subjects connected with Horology, the
- field being so extensive and the want so severely felt. Enclosed
- I send you the subscription price; in this much I have accepted
- your invitation, but I also enclose some few lines on a subject not
- particularly practical or theoretical, but very near the truth, and
- may perhaps give you a view of our wants.
-
- To tell the “plain unvarnished truth,” I am a watch repairer, located
- in a small country village, with a decent stock of tools and a
- moderate trade. In all this I am no exception; so I write this in
- the name of all who are similarly situated. Isolated as we are, we
- (the country village watch repairers) have few means to improve our
- knowledge of the trade, but work on the same old principles learned
- when we were boys and apprentices, and of better and more expeditious
- ways of doing our work we are entirely oblivious. True, our friends
- of the Hebraic persuasion, who, angel like, bring us face to face
- with the outer horological world by selling us material and tools,
- occasionally present to our benumbed vision something new, such as a
- Swiss lathe, or lathes used in the factories; but of what use are they
- to us? We purchase one; well, on the bench it may be an ornament, but
- for use, drilling large holes is the height of our ambition. We have
- not the time to learn by self-experience all the boasted usefulness
- and capacities of the tool; so we go back to our old verge or Jacot
- lathe when we have to put in a pivot or a new staff. We may know all
- about the escapement and be able to detect the cause of any trouble
- with it, but we have no knowledge of the latest modes of repairing the
- injury when it is discovered, and this knowledge is what I hope to
- find in your journal. I live in a section where the general class of
- work is of a very low grade, even the old verge being very common. Our
- stock of material has to be heavy in proportion to our trade, and then
- once in a while we are compelled to send our work to the city, some
- sixty miles distant, in consequence of not being able to do it, either
- from a lack of the material or want of a proper tool. To all intents
- and purposes we remain as stationary as the oyster. Not only do we
- have these vexations, but the ignorance of the public at large as to
- the treatment of their time-keepers is a fruitful source of annoyance;
- we are often charged with fraudulent practices, and a certain degree
- of caution is observed by more than the most ignorant. Thus, a few
- days ago, a stalwart son of the Green Isle made his appearance in
- front of the counter, and, projecting in front of our optics a huge
- English double-cased verge watch, spoke in almost dramatic tones:
-
- “Plase, sir, av’ ye could make me ticker here go, sir?”
-
- Answering in the affirmative we reached for the silent “ticker.” He
- drew back with alarm.
-
- “Bedad, an’ ye’ll not stale a morsle frae this?”
-
- “Well, but let me see the watch.”
-
- “An’ will ye let me eyes be on yes all the time?”
-
- “Yes.”
-
- “An’ yes’ll not stale a jewil?”
-
- “No.”
-
- “Thin, there it is.”
-
- On looking at the movement the verge was found broken, the injury
- explained, and the price given. He decided on the repairs being done,
- but said, “Give me the watch now and when ye gets the thing fixed its
- meself will come and git it and pay yes.”
-
- “But we cannot repair the watch without having it.”
-
- “Faith, thin, ye’ll not have it; ye’ll be taking something frae it.”
-
- Now, this is an extreme case of ignorance, pardonable, perhaps, in
- this instance, but the public embraces multitudes just as ignorant
- where an allowance cannot be made. I do not expect the JOURNAL to
- reach such cases, or to influence the general mass, but my hope is
- that it will, by raising the general self-respect and tone of the
- repairers, indirectly elevate the respect felt for them by the public
- at large.
-
- But I am writing too long and rambling a letter. I wish to express my
- hearty wishes for your prosperity. And, in conclusion, will you allow
- me to express a hope that you will give us the knowledge we need--that
- is, post us up on the minutiæ of repairing in the latest styles, the
- newest processes devised, and, above all, give us an article on the
- lathe and its uses?
-
- Yours truly,
- W. L. C.
-
-
-We have the pleasure to give our correspondent the assurance that an
-expert will contribute to our next number an article interesting as
-well as valuable in instruction as to the use of the lathe.
-
-
-
-
-Eclipse of the Sun.
-
-
-The approaching total eclipse of the sun, on the 7th of August next,
-is exciting much interest. The obscuration first occurs in latitude
-39° 53´ 3´´ north, longitude 138° 37´ 4´´ west--Washington being the
-meridian. The first totality is on the Pacific coast of Siberia, at
-sunrise, in lat. 52° 41´ 9´´ north, and long. 165° 26´ 4´´ west. The
-eclipse is total at noon in Alaska, lat. 61° 46´ 9´´ north, and long.
-68° 4´ 6´´ west. The line of the total eclipse now runs south-easterly,
-grazing the coast near Sitka, thence north into British America; then
-entering the United States, near the head of Milk River, long. 30° W.;
-thence through the south-west corner of Minnesota, diagonally through
-Iowa, crosses the Mississippi at Burlington; thence through Illinois,
-a little north of Springfield, crosses the Ohio river at or near
-Louisville, Ky., passes through the south-west corner of West Virginia,
-through North Carolina, just south of Raleigh, ending on the Atlantic
-coast at sunset, just north of Beaufort, N. C., in lat. 31° 15´ 2´´
-north, and long. 9° 36´ 6´´ east. The line thus described will be that
-of totality, only partial in any other part of the United States.
-
-The United States Government is, or has been, establishing a meridian
-line at Springfield, partly to make observations on this coming
-eclipse, and with the further view of determining a standard of
-surveyed lines--all of the Government surveys in Illinois having been
-geodetic. Professor Austin, of the Smithsonian Institute, is in charge
-of the work, aided by an able corps of assistants.
-
-
-
-
-Diamond-Cutting.
-
-
-At the Great Exhibition in Paris, in a part of the park contiguous to
-the Netherland section, M. Coster, of Amsterdam, has erected a building
-wherein all the processes of diamond-cutting are carried on.
-
-The first rough shaping of the more important facets of the brilliants
-is here seen performed by the workman, who operates on two diamonds at
-once, by bruising each against the other, angle against angle. The dust
-that falls from the stones is preserved for the subsequent processes
-of grinding and polishing those facets that distinguish the many-sided
-brilliant from the dull, original crystal of the diamond. It is used,
-mingled with oil, on a flat iron disk, set revolving with vast rapidity
-by steam-power, the stone itself being held upon this disk or wheel by
-a tool to which it is attached by a mass of fusible metallic alloy,
-into which the stone is skilfully inserted. Skill of eye and hand, only
-attainable by great practice, is needed for this work; but a skill not
-less exact is needed for another process, which may here be seen in
-daily operation--the process of cleavage. The diamond, when a blow is
-struck on an edged tool placed parallel to one of the octahedral faces
-of the crystal, readily splits in that direction. But to recognize the
-precise direction on the complex and generally rounded form of the
-diamond crystal; to cut a little notch by means of a knife edge of
-diamonds formed of one of the slices cleaved from a crystal, and to
-cut that notch exactly the right spot; then to plant the steel knife
-that is to split the diamond precisely in the right position; finally,
-with a smart blow, to effect the cleavage so as to separate neither
-too large nor small a portion of the stone--these various steps in the
-process need great skill and judgment, and present to the observer
-the interesting spectacle which a handicraft dependent on experience
-of hand and eye always affords. But Mr. Coster’s exhibition has other
-objects of interest. For the first time, we may see here, side by side,
-the diamond with the minerals that accompany it in the river beds of
-Brazil; and there are even examples in which crystals of diamonds
-are included within a mass of quartz crystals, which have all the
-appearance of having been formed simultaneously with deposits of the
-diamond.
-
-The different districts of Rio and of Bahia are thus represented--the
-former producing a confusedly crystallized sort of diamond termed
-“bort,” and the latter an opaque black variety; both these kinds being
-found associated with the crystallized diamonds used for jewelry.
-Though useful in state of powder, the black carbon and “bort” are
-incapable of being cut as a jewel.--_“Maskelyne’s Report,” Great
-Exhibition._
-
-
-
-
-The Alloys of Aluminum with Copper.
-
-
-When Sir Humphrey Davy announced the fact that soda, lime, potash,
-magnesia, and the other alkalies were but oxides of a metallic base, it
-would have been deemed chimerical to have supposed that the discoveries
-he made by the expensive aid of the battery would at later date become
-of really commercial value. He did obtain both sodium and potassium
-in the metallic state. The substances in this form were new to the
-chemical world, still more strange to the popular. So new was it to the
-chemists, that, on a globule of the reduced sodium being presented to
-a very distinguished chemist, he, with some enthusiasm, examined it;
-and, admitting the fact of its being a metal, exclaimed, “how heavy
-it is!”--when the real fact was that its specific gravity was less
-than water; the expression was the result of the general preconceived
-opinion that a high specific gravity was a test of a metallic body. It
-was reserved for a French chemist, Henry St. Claire Deville, to utilize
-the metal sodium, and that, too, in such a manner that the demand
-aroused attention to its production;--demand will inevitably bring a
-supply.
-
-The original reduction was made by Davy, by means of the voltaic
-battery. After it had been proved that these bases were really metals
-capable of reduction, chemistry brought all its resources to bear on
-the problem, and they were produced by other methods than the battery.
-All the processes adopted, however, were too expensive and laborious,
-involving an extraordinary amount of complicated manipulations with but
-inadequate results. The metal sodium, which is the immediate subject of
-our inquiry, long remained an object simply of curiosity or experiment
-in the laboratory.
-
-The methods of reducing the metal have of late years been so simplified
-that, to quote Prof. Chas. A. Joy in the _Journal of Applied
-Chemistry_: “A few years ago a pound of this metal could not have been
-purchased for two hundred dollars, and even at that price there were
-few manufacturers hardy enough to take the order. At the present time
-it can be readily manufactured for seventy-five cents, if not for fifty
-cents a pound; and the probabilities are that we shall soon be able to
-obtain it for one-quarter of a dollar.”
-
-Deville found that by the reaction of the metallic sodium on common
-chloride of aluminum a reduction was effected; the chlorine taking
-up the sodium, forming chloride of sodium (common salt), while the
-aluminum was left free in the metallic state. It is hardly necessary
-to go into the particulars of the process; but a metal well known to
-exist, had, for the first time, been brought to the world in such a
-condition of structure that its qualities could be tested, not only
-chemically, but mechanically. This was the direct result of Deville’s
-metallurgic process of obtaining the reducing agent--sodium.
-
-Aluminum in itself would be of but little use, so that a brief
-description will be all that is necessary. It is about the color of
-silver, but susceptible of a higher polish, especially on a fresh-cut
-surface; it is much less susceptible of oxidization than silver; its
-specific gravity is but little more than pine wood, and its tenacity,
-ductility, and laminating qualities are nearly equal to silver. Its use
-in the mechanical arts is limited, notwithstanding all these qualities,
-from the fact of its low point of fusibility, and at the heat of
-the fusible point being easily oxidized, so much so as to prevent
-soldering, except by an autogenous process. But aluminum does possess
-a property peculiar to itself--that of forming a purely and strictly
-_chemical alloy_ with copper. It unites with it in any proportion;
-the compound formed by the addition of 10 per cent. of aluminum to 90
-per cent. of copper has been found to possess all the properties of
-an entirely new metal, with qualities that render it a very valuable
-material in all fine work, such as astronomical instruments; and very
-fine machinery, such as watch-lathes, etc.
-
-The French reports on the alloy are somewhat voluminous, but we give
-the following.
-
-The color of this bronze so closely resembles that of 18 carat gold,
-such as is used for the best jewelry and watch-cases, that it is
-capable of receiving the highest polish, and is far superior in beauty
-to any gilding.
-
-Samples taken from different parts of the largest castings, when
-analyzed, show the most complete uniformity of composition, provided
-only that the two metals have originally been properly mixed while in
-a state of fusion. These experiments have been made upon cylinders
-weighing many hundreds of pounds, and are entirely conclusive.
-
-This valuable quality is not found in any of the more ordinary alloys
-of copper. The alloy of copper with tin, for example, known as _gun
-metal_, is notoriously subject to a phenomenon known as _liquation_;
-in consequence of which a great difference is found in the composition
-of the same casting, both in the top as compared with the bottom, and
-in the centre as compared with the circumference.
-
-This phenomenon often causes great inconvenience, as the different
-parts of large objects will in consequence vary greatly in hardness
-as well as in strength. In casting artillery the difficulty becomes a
-serious one, and no means have yet been discovered by which it can be
-entirely removed.
-
-This homogeneousness of aluminum bronze is a natural consequence of the
-great affinity existing between the two metals of which it is composed;
-and that there is such an affinity is clearly proved by the phenomenon
-attending the manufacture of the alloy. The copper is first melted in
-a crucible and the aluminum is then added to it _in ingots_. At first
-there is, of course, a reduction of temperature, because the aluminum
-in melting absorbs the heat from the melted copper; and this absorption
-is so great, in consequence of the great capacity for heat of aluminum,
-that a part of the copper may even become solid. But let the mixture
-be stirred a moment with an iron bar, and the two metals immediately
-unite; and in an instant, although the crucible may have been removed
-from the furnace, the temperature of the metals rises to incandescence,
-while the mass becomes as fluid as water.
-
-This enormous disengagement of heat, not seen in the preparation of
-any other ordinary alloy, indicates, not a simple mixture, but a real
-chemical combination of the two metals. The 10 per cent. bronze may
-therefore be properly compared to a salt, the more so as it is found by
-calculation to contain, within a very minute fraction, four equivalents
-of copper to one equivalent of aluminum.
-
-The 10 per cent. bronze may be forged cold, and becomes extremely dense
-under the action of the hammer. The blades of dessert-knives are thus
-treated in order to give them the requisite hardness and elasticity.
-But it has another valuable quality which is found in no other kind
-of brass or bronze: it may be forged hot, as well as, if not better
-than the very best iron. It thus becomes harder and more rigid, and
-its fracture shows a grain similar to that of cast steel. On account
-of the hardness of the aluminum bronze, rolling it into sheets would
-be a tedious and expensive process, were it not for this property of
-being malleable at a red heat. But it may in this manner be rolled into
-sheets of any thickness or drawn into wire of any size. It may also be
-drawn into tubes of any dimension.
-
-From several experiments made at different times at Paris, it appears
-that the breaking weight of the cast bronze varies from 65 to 70
-kilogrammes the square millimetre. The same bronze drawn into wire
-supported a weight of 90 kilogrammes the square millimetre. The iron
-used for suspension bridges, tested in the same manner, did not show an
-average of more than 30 kilogrammes. Some experiments were also made by
-Mr. Anderson, at the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, in England, who tested
-at the same time the aluminum bronze, the brass used for artillery
-and commonly called _gun metal_, and the cast steel made by Krupp in
-Prussia. Taking for the maximum strength of the bronze the lowest of
-the numbers found as above, we are thus enabled to form the following
-table of comparative tenacities:
-
- Aluminum bronze 10 per cent. 65
- Crupp’s Cast Steel 53
- Refined Iron 30
- Brass for cannon 28
-
-The comparative toughness of these same four metals was also tested in
-the following manner: A bar of each was prepared of the same size, and
-each bar was then notched with a chisel to precisely the same depth.
-The bars were broken separately, upon an anvil, by blows from a hammer.
-The last three metals in the table broke each at the first blow, with
-a clean and square fracture. The aluminum bronze only began to crack
-at the eighth blow, and required a number of additional blows before
-the two pieces were entirely separated. And the irregular, torn surface
-of the fracture showed the peculiarly tough and fibrous nature of the
-metal.
-
-The elasticity of the aluminum bronze was tested by M. Tresca,
-Professor at the _Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers_. The experiment
-was made upon a bar of simple cast metal, and the following is his
-report: “The coefficient of elasticity of the aluminum bronze, the
-cast metal, is half that of the best wrought-iron. This coefficient is
-double that of brass and four times that of gun metal, under the same
-conditions.”
-
-The specific gravity is 7.7, about the same as iron. Another very
-valuable quality is presented in the fact that it is acted on by
-atmospheric influences less than are silver, brass, or bronze. This
-places it in the same rank with gold, platinum and aluminum.
-
-Very stiff and very elastic, tougher than iron, very little acted upon
-chemically, and in certain cases not at all, capable of being cast like
-ordinary bronze or brass, forged like iron and steel, of being worked
-in every way like the most malleable metals or alloys, having, added
-to these properties, a color analogous to that of the most precious
-metal, this bronze proves itself adapted to uses almost innumerable.
-At first sight, it seems difficult to admit that the relatively small
-proportions of aluminum which enters into the composition of this
-bronze can be sufficient to modify so extraordinarily the properties
-of the copper which constitutes so large a portion of its weight. But
-we must remember that the specific gravity of aluminum is very low,
-and that a given weight of this metal possesses a bulk four times as
-large as the same weight in silver. It follows from this that the ten
-per cent. of aluminum contained in the bronze equals in bulk forty per
-cent. in silver.
-
-The specimens of the ware we have seen, such as spoons, forks, cups,
-watch-cases, etc., are certainly very beautiful, having the color and
-high polish of gold, while dilute acids do not affect the surface.
-
-
-
-
-On the Reduction of Silver in the Wet Way.
-
-
-Every chemist is familiar with the reduction of chloride of silver
-in the form of powder by means of metallic zinc in the presence of a
-little free acid. It is not easy to bring two such substances as the
-silver salt and the metal into close contact, and after the work is
-accomplished the removal of the excess of zinc has its difficulties.
-Dr. Grager suggests a modification of the old method that ought to
-be more generally made known. The chloride of silver is dissolved
-in ammonia and poured into a well-stopped bottle, and into this is
-introduced an excess of metallic zinc, in not too small fragments, so
-that any reduced metal adhering to it may be readily washed off.
-
-The decomposition begins immediately, and is rapidly accomplished,
-especially if the contents of the flask be well shaken up. Three hours
-will suffice to reduce one-quarter of a pound of chloride of silver.
-It is easy to ascertain when the reduction is ended, by testing a
-portion of the ammoniacal solution with hydrochloric acid. As soon as
-no cloudiness or curdy precipitate is formed, the work may be regarded
-as completed.
-
-A slight excess of ammonia is said to be favorable. The reduced silver
-must be washed with water until all odor of ammonia has disappeared.
-The pieces of zinc are removed by pouring the contents of the flask
-through a funnel, the opening of which is too narrow for the passage
-of the zinc fragments, while the reduced silver can be easily washed
-through. The finely divided silver can be digested in hydrochloric
-acid to restore it to a pure white color, and it is then ready for
-solution or fusion, and will be found to be perfectly pure. In dealing
-with large quantities it would be economical to recover a portion of
-the ammonia by distillation. In the same way an ammoniacal solution
-of nitrate of silver can also be reduced by zinc, and the silver
-obtained pure, even when the original solution of the nitrate contains
-copper--provided a small quantity of silver be kept in the bath.
-
-It is better where copper is present not to take all of the zinc that
-may be requisite for the reduction of the silver. It will prove a
-great convenience to be spared the necessity of converting the silver
-into the chloride, as it is no easy task to wash out this salt on
-filters--and it will be found to be applicable to alloys which do not
-contain more than 25 per cent. of silver.--_From Prof. Joy in the
-Journal of Applied Chemistry._
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-Obvious errors in punctuation have been fixed.
-
-Page 7: “Mechanique Celeste” changed to “Méchanique Céleste”
-
-Page 12: “ou rexperience” changed to “our experience”
-
-Page 18: “head-quarters far astronomical observations” changed to
-“head-quarters for astronomical observations”
-
-Page 22: “it accomodates” changed to “it accommodates”
-
-The Table of Contents lists “Equation of the Time Table” as the article
-on page 28. The actual article is named “On the Reduction of Silver in
-the Wet Way.” This has intentionally been left as per the original.
-Similarly, there is no actual section titled “Notices of New Tools”
-despite its inclusion in the Table of Contents, and this has been left
-as per the original.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL,
-VOL. I, NO. 1, JULY 1869 ***
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- American Horological Journal Vol 1. No 1., by G. B. Miller&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of American Horological Journal, Vol. I, No. 1, July 1869, by G. B. Miller</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: American Horological Journal, Vol. I, No. 1, July 1869</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Devoted to Pratical Horology</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: G. B. Miller</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 17, 2022 [eBook #67859]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL, VOL. I, NO. 1, JULY 1869 ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-<h1 class="bb"><span class="small">AMERICAN</span><br /><span class="big">Horological Journal</span>.</h1>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><abbr title="colume">Vol.</abbr> I.</span><span class="ml">NEW YORK, JULY, 1869.</span><span class="smcap ml"><abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1.</span>
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Astronomy_in_its_Relations_to_Horology"><span class="smcap">Astronomy in its Relations to Horology</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_5">5</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Watch_and_Chronometer_Jewelling"><span class="smcap">Watch and Chronometer Jewelling</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_11">11</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Hints_on_Clocks_and_Clock-Making"><span class="smcap">Hints on Clocks and Clock Making</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_15">15</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#newtools"><span class="smcap">Notices of New Tools</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_17">17</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Greenwich_Observatory"><span class="smcap">Greenwich Observatory</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_17">17</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Pinions"><span class="smcap">Pinions</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_20">20</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#New_Three-Pin_Escapement"><span class="smcap">New Three-Pin Escapement</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#English_Opinion_of_American_Watch_Manufacture"><span class="smcap">English Opinion of American Watch Manufacture</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Correspondence"><span class="smcap">Correspondence</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_24">24</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Eclipse_of_the_Sun"><span class="smcap">Eclipse of the Sun</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_25">25</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#Diamond-Cutting"><span class="smcap">Diamond Cutting</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_25">25</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#The_Alloys_of_Aluminum_with_Copper"><span class="smcap">Alloys of Aluminum with Copper</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_25">25</a>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#On_the_Reduction_of_Silver_in_the_Wet_Way"><span class="smcap">Equation of Time Table</span>,</a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-<hr class="r65" />
-<p class="center">⁂ <i>Address all communications for</i> <span class="smcap">Horological Journal</span>
-<i>to</i> <span class="smcap">G. B. Miller</span>, <i>P. O. Box 6715, New York City.
-Publication Office 229 Broadway.</i></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Astronomy_in_its_Relations_to_Horology">Astronomy in its Relations to Horology.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h3>NUMBER ONE.</h3>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>However accurate an instrument for the mensuration of time may be,
-it would be of little use for close observation unless we have some
-standard by which to test its performance. We look to Astronomy to
-furnish us with this desideratum, nor do we look in vain. The mean
-sidereal day, measured by the time elapsed between any two consecutive
-transits of any star at the same meridian, and the mean sidereal
-year&mdash;which is the time included between two consecutive returns of the
-sun to the same star&mdash;are immutable units with which all great periods
-of time are compared; the oscillations of an isochronous pendulum
-affording us a means of correctly dividing the intermediate space into
-hours and days.</p>
-
-<p>We must premise that the whole theory of taking time by sidereal
-observations is based on angular motion, the mensuration of one of
-the angles of motion giving a measurement of space, so that to say
-space, or distance, is equivalent to saying time. From noon of one
-day to noon of another is the whole problem to be solved by correct
-division. The astronomical day begins at noon, but in civil law the
-day is dated from midnight. So in the year the astronomical day is
-dated December 31, while in common reckoning the 1st of January is the
-initial point. This day is divided into twenty-four hours, counted in
-England, America, and the most of the Continental nations of Europe, by
-twelve and twelve. The French astronomers, however, adopted the decimal
-system, for ease in the computation. Thus they divided the day into
-ten hours, the hour into one hundred minutes, and the minute into one
-hundred seconds. This plan was in conformity with the French system
-of decimal weights and measures. Again, in Italy, the day was divided
-into twenty-four hours, but counting from one to twenty-four o’clock.
-The French system presents some features well worthy of adoption, as it
-gives results so much more easy in computation&mdash;a facility unattainable
-in the common division; yet it did not come into general use in other
-countries, and although some French astronomers still hold to the
-system, it is gradually dying out.</p>
-
-<p>At one time during the Revolution in France a clock in the gardens of
-the Tuileries was regulated to show time by the decimal system.</p>
-
-<p>For the Horologist the mean length of the day is sufficient to show the
-rate of his instrument for that particular day, but the astronomical
-and civil division requires a much longer period of observation. This
-is obtained by the position of the mean annual equinoxes or solstices,
-and is estimated from the winter solstice, the middle of the long
-annual night under the North Pole; and the period between this solstice
-and its return is a natural cycle, peculiarly suited for a standard of
-measurement.</p>
-
-<p>Even with such a standard as the civil year of 365d. 5h. 48m. 49.7s.,
-the incommensurability that exists between the length of the day and
-the real place of the sun makes it very difficult<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span> to adjust the ratio
-of both in whole numbers. Were we to return to the point in the earth’s
-orbit in exactly 365 days, we would have precisely the same number
-of days in each year, and the sun would be at the same point on the
-ecliptic at the same second at the beginning and end of the year. There
-is, however, a fraction of a day, so that a solar year and civil are
-not of equal duration.</p>
-
-<p>It is thus we have our bissextile year, from the fact that the
-inequality amounts to nearly a quarter of a day, so that in four years
-we have a whole day’s gain; but not exactly, because a fraction still
-remains to be accounted for. Now, if we should suppress the one day
-of leap-year once at the end of each three out of four centuries, the
-civil would be within a very small fraction equal to the solar year,
-as given by observation; this small fraction would be almost entirely
-eliminated, provided we suppressed the bissextile at the end of every
-four thousand years. Were this fraction neglected, the beginning of the
-new civil year would precede the tropical by just that much, so that in
-the course of 1507 years the whole day’s difference would obtain.</p>
-
-<p>The Egyptian year was dated from the heliacal rising of the star
-Sirius; it contained only 365 days. By easy computation it can be
-shown that in every 1461 years a whole year was lost; this cycle was
-called the Sothaic period, in which the heliacal rising of Sirius
-passed through the whole year and took place again on the same day.
-The commencement of that cycle took place 1322 years before Christ.
-The year by the Roman calendar was dated by Julius Cæsar the 1st of
-January, that being the day of the new moon immediately following the
-winter solstice in the 707th year of Rome. Christ’s nativity is dated
-on the 25th of December, in Cæsar’s 45th year, and the 46th year of the
-Julian calendar is assumed to be the 1st year of our era. The preceding
-year is designated by chronologists the 1st year before Christ, the
-dates thence running backward the same as they run forward subsequent
-to that period.</p>
-
-<p>Astronomically, that year is registered 0; the astronomical year begins
-at noon on the 31st of December, and the date of any observation
-expresses the number of days and hours which have actually elapsed
-since that time, the 31st of December&mdash;Year 0.</p>
-
-<p>The year is divided into months by old and almost universal consent,
-but the period of seven days is by far the most permanent division
-of a rotation of the earth around the sun. It was the division long
-before the historic period. The Brahmins in India used it with the same
-denominations as at the present day the Jews, Arabs, Egyptians, and
-Assyrians. “It has survived the fall of empires, and has existed among
-all successive generations, a proof of their common origin.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more interesting in the study of astronomy than its
-chronological value. La Place says: “Whole nations have been swept
-from the earth, with their languages, arts, and sciences, leaving but
-confused masses of ruins to mark the place where mighty cities stood;
-their history, with but the exception of a few doubtful traditions, has
-perished; but the perfection of their astronomical observations marks
-their high antiquity, fixes the periods of their existence, and proves
-that even at that early time they must have made considerable progress
-in science.”</p>
-
-<p>The earth revolving around the sun in an ellipse, the position of the
-major axis of the orbit would indicate something in regard to eras in
-astronomy extending not only beyond the historical period, but so far
-back in the past that imagination is almost at fault. The position of
-the major axis of the orbit depends on the direct motion of the perigee
-and the precession of the equinoxes conjointly, the annual motions
-respectively being 11´´.8 and 50´´.1, the two combined motions being
-61´´.9 annually. A tropical revolution is made in 209.84 years. This
-being a constant quantity, we may ascertain when the line of the major
-axis coincided with the line of the equinoxes. This occurrence took
-place about 4,000 or 4,090 years before the year 0. In the year 6,483
-the major axis will again coincide with the line of the equinoxes,
-but then the solar perigee will coincide with the vernal equinox. So,
-it will be seen that the period of revolution is 20,966 years. But in
-the progress of this revolution there must have been a time when the
-major axis was perpendicular to the line of the equinoxes. A simple<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-calculation will show that the eventful year was 1250; and so important
-is this event considered, that La Place, the immortal author of the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Méchanique Céleste</i>, proposed to make the vernal equinox of this
-year the initial day of the year 1 of our era. Again, at the solstices
-the sun is at the greatest distance from the equator; consequently
-the declination of the sun is equal to the obliquity of the ecliptic.
-The length of a shadow cast at noonday from the stile of an ordinary
-sun-dial would accurately determine the precise time on which this
-position occurs.</p>
-
-<p>Though wanting in accuracy, such a measurement is of interest, from the
-fact that there are recorded observations of this kind that were taken
-in the city of Layang, in China, 1100 years before our present era is
-dated. This observation gives the zenith distance of the sun at the
-moment of the observation. Half the sum of the zenith distances gives
-the latitude, and half their difference gives the obliquity of the
-ecliptic at the period. Now the law of the variation of the ecliptic
-is well known, and modern computation has verified both the moment
-of taking the observation and the latitude of the place. Eclipses
-were the foundation of the whole of Chinese chronology, and recorded
-observations prove the civilization of that strange race for 4700 years.</p>
-
-<p>Horology, with astronomy, was not neglected even as early as 3102 years
-before Christ, as the following will show.</p>
-
-<p>The cycles of Jupiter and Saturn are very unequal, the latter being a
-period of 918 years; the mean motion of the two planets was determined
-by the Indians in that part of the respective orbits where Saturn’s
-motion was the slowest and Jupiter’s the most rapid. This observed
-event must have been 3102 years before, and 1491 after the year 0; but
-the record shows that the observation was taken before the last-named
-date.</p>
-
-<p>Since both solar and sidereal time is estimated from the passage of
-the sun and the equinoctial point across the meridian of the place of
-observation, the time will vary in different places by as much as the
-passage precedes each. It being obvious that when the sun is in the
-meridian at any one place, it is midnight at a point on the earth’s
-surface diametrically opposite; so an observation taken at different
-places at the same moment of absolute time, will be recorded as having
-happened at different times. Therefore when a comparison of these
-different observations is to be made, it becomes necessary to reduce
-them by computation to what the result would have been had they been
-taken under the same meridian at the same moment of absolute time. Sir
-John Herschel proposed to employ mean equinoctial time, which is the
-same for all the world. It is the time elapsed from the moment the
-mean sun enters the mean vernal equinox, and is reckoned in mean solar
-days and parts of days. This difference in time is really the angular
-motion of the earth, and by measuring it the longitude of any place on
-the surface of the earth can be determined, provided we have a standard
-point of departure, and an instrument capable of accurately dividing
-the time into small quantities during its transit from the meridian on
-which it was rated.</p>
-
-<p>As will be hereafter shown, the axis of the earth’s rotation is
-invariable. Were the position of the major axis of the earth’s orbit
-as immutable, an observation of any star on the meridian taken at
-any place would always be the same. Again, the form of the earth has
-an important effect; the equatorial diameter exceeds the polar, thus
-giving a large excess of matter at the equator. Now the attraction of
-an external body not only draws another to it in its whole mass, but,
-as the force of attraction is inversely as the square of the distance,
-it follows that the attracted body would be revolved on its own centre
-of gravity until its major diameter was in a straight line with the
-attracting body.</p>
-
-<p>The sun and moon are both attracting bodies for the earth; the plane
-of the equator is at an angle to the plane of the ecliptic of 23° 27´
-34´´.69, and the plane of the moon’s orbit is inclined to it 5° 8´
-47´´.9 Now from the oblate form of the earth, the sun and moon, acting
-obliquely and unequally, urge the plane of the equator from its own
-position from east to west, thus changing the equinoctial points to the
-extent of 50´´.41 annually.</p>
-
-<p>This action, were it not compensated by another force, would in time
-alter the angle of the ecliptic until the equatorial plane and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span> the
-ecliptic coincided. There are few but have seen the philosophical toy
-called the Gyrascope. This toy, on a miniature scale, gives a fine
-illustration of the force brought in to correct the combined action of
-the sun and moon on the obliquity of the equator. The rotation of the
-earth is held in its own plane by its own revolution, the same as the
-gyrascope seems to overcome the laws of gravitation by its force of
-revolution.</p>
-
-<p>But not only do the sun and moon disturb the plane of the ecliptic,
-but the action of other planets on the earth and sun is to be taken
-into account. A very slow variation in the position of the plane of the
-ecliptic, in relation to the plane of the equator, is observed from
-these influences. It must be remembered that a very slight deviation
-in the angle can and would be detected by observation with modern
-instruments. We do find that this attraction affects the inclination of
-the ecliptic to the equator of 0´´.31 annually.</p>
-
-<p>This motion is entirely independent of the form of the earth. Now,
-if we assume that the sun and moon give the equinoctial points a
-retrograde motion on the ecliptic, we must deduct the influence of the
-planets. We may then calculate the mean disturbance by subtracting
-the latter from the former&mdash;the difference is settled by both theory
-and observation to be 50´´.1 annually. This motion of the equinoxes
-is called the precession of the equinoxes. Its consideration forms a
-very important element in the estimation of time, as the position of
-the various fixed stars, though so very distant, are all affected in
-longitude by this quantity of 50´´.1&mdash;being an increase of longitude.
-Therefore, if we were to calculate the position of any given star in
-order to get a transit for mean time, or true time, we must take this
-quantity into consideration. The increase is so great that the earliest
-astronomers, even with their imperfect modes of observation, detected
-it. Hipparchus, 128 years before Christ, compared his own observations
-with those of Timocharis, 153 years before. He found the solution of
-the problem the same as Diophantus found the solution of the squares
-and cubes, by analysis. In the time of Hipparchus, the sun was at a
-point 30° in advance of its present position, for it then entered into
-the constellation of Aries near the vernal equinox.</p>
-
-<p>At the present time the position of the equinoctial points shows a
-recession of the whole, 30° 1´ 40´´.2. At this rate of motion the
-constellations called the Signs of the Zodiac are some distance from
-the divisions of the ecliptic that bear their names. At the rate
-of 50´´.1 the whole revolution of the equinoctial points will be
-accomplished in 25,868 years; but this is again modified because the
-precession must vary in different centuries for the following reasons:
-the sun’s motion is direct, the precession retrograde; therefore, the
-sun arrives at the equator sooner than he does at the same star of
-observation. Now, the tropical year is 365d. 5h. 48´ 49´´.7; and as the
-precession is exactly 50´´.1, we must suppose it takes some time for
-the sun to move through that arc. By direct observation it is found
-that the time required for such translation is 20´ 19´´.6. By adding
-this amount to the tropical year we have the sidereal year of 365d.
-6h. 9´ 9´´.6 in mean solar days. This amount of precession has been
-on the increase since the days of its first recorder, Hipparchus, as
-the augmentation amounts to no less than 0.´´455. By adding that to the
-known precession we find that the civil year is shorter now by 4´´.21
-than in his time; but, as a great division of time, the year can be
-changed by this cause not more than 43.´´</p>
-
-<p>The action of the moon on the accumulation of matter at the earth’s
-equator is a source of disturbance that in very accurate observations
-for time should be eliminated. Thus the moon, with the conjoint action
-of the sun, depending on relative position, causes the pole of the
-equator to describe a small ellipse in the heavens with axes of 18´´.5
-for the major, and 13´´.674 for the minor; the longer axis being
-directed to the pole of the ecliptic. This inequality has a period
-of 19 years,&mdash;it being equal to the revolution of the nodes of the
-lunar orbit. The combination of these disturbances changes, by a small
-quantity, the position of the polar axis of the earth in regard to the
-stars, but not in regard to its own surface. With so many disturbing
-causes, we must add that of Jupiter, whose attraction is diminishing
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span> obliquity of the ecliptic by 0´´.457 according to M. Bessel.</p>
-
-<p>The results of all these forces must affect the position of all the
-stars and planets as seen from our earth. Their longitudes being
-reckoned from the equinoxes, the precession of these points would
-increase the longitude; but as it affects all the stars and planets
-alike, it would make no real or apparent change in their relative
-positions. Nutation, however, affects the celestial latitudes and
-longitudes, as the real motion of the earth’s polar axis changes the
-relative positions. So great is the change that our present pole star
-has changed from 12° to 1° 24; in regard to the celestial pole, the
-gradual approximation will continue until it is with 0° 30´, after
-which it will leave the pole indefinitely until in 12,934 years α Lyræ
-will be the pole star.</p>
-
-<p>So far we have given only the causes that affect the meridian, and
-consequently our standard for time; but that point being established
-for the yearly and diurnal revolutions, it becomes necessary to find
-some means to divide the day into minute fractional parts, such as
-seconds and parts of seconds. This, it has been stated, is effected
-by means of an isochronous pendulum. On this instrument no comment is
-required but of the causes that disturb its accuracy much is needed.
-In 1672, at Cayenne, the astronomer Richter, while taking transits
-of fixed stars, found his clock lost 2´ 28´´ per day. This was an
-error that arrested his attention, and he immediately attributed it
-to some variation in the length of the pendulum&mdash;due to other causes
-than atmospheric changes and expansion. He determined the length of a
-pendulum beating seconds in that latitude, which was 5° N. in South
-America. He found that that pendulum was shorter than one beating
-seconds in Paris, by 0833+ of an inch. Now, if the earth was a sphere,
-the attraction of gravitation at all places on its surface would be
-equal, and the oscillations of a pendulum would also be equal, + or
-- the disturbing effect of centrifugal force&mdash;an amount that can be
-easily determined. The real reason of the variation is found in the
-configuration of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>The amount of the attraction of gravitation at any point of the earth’s
-surface is found by the distance traversed by any body during the
-first second of its fall. The pendulum is a falling body, and may be by
-the same analysis reasoned on that pertains to the laws of gravitation;
-the centrifugal force is measured by any deflection from a tangent to
-the earth’s surface in a second.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that the centrifugal force at the poles, where there is
-the least motion, would not be equal to the force of gravitation, and
-at the equator must be exactly equal; but the deflection of a circle
-from a tangent measures the intensity of the earth’s attraction, and
-is equal to the versed sine of the arc described during that time,
-the velocity of the earth’s rotation being known, the value of the
-arc is deducible. The centrifugal force at the equator is equal to
-¹⁄₂₈₉th part of the attraction of gravitation. Again, the uniformity
-of the earth’s mass becomes an object of consideration. Assuming that
-the figure of the earth is an ellipsoid of rotation, we will show the
-relation that form bears to the equal oscillation of a pendulum.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the earth as a homogeneous mass, analysis gives us the certainty
-that if the intensity of gravitation at the equator be taken as unity,
-the increase of gravity to the poles eliminating the differences of
-the centrifugal force must be = to 2.5, the ratio of the centrifugal
-force to that of gravitation at the equator. Now, taking the 2.5 of
-.346 = 1/115.2, this then must be the total increase of gravitation.
-Did we know the exact amount of increase at every point, from the
-equator to the poles, a perfect map of the form of the earth could
-be produced from calculation; experiment being from physical causes
-totally impracticable. The following analysis, quoted from an eminent
-physicist, gives a very lucid idea of the reasoning:</p>
-
-<p>“If the earth were a homogeneous sphere without rotation, its
-attraction on bodies on its surface would be everywhere equal. If it
-be elliptical and of variable density, the force of gravity ought to
-increase in intensity from the equator to the pole as <em>unity plus</em>
-a constant quantity multiplied into the square of the sine of the
-latitude. But for a spheroid in rotation the centrifugal varies by
-the law of mechanics, as the square of the sine of the latitude from
-the equator, where it is greatest,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span> to the poles, where it is least.
-And as it tends to make bodies fly off the surface, it diminishes the
-force of gravity by a small quantity. Hence, by gravitation, which
-is the difference of these two forces, the fall of bodies ought to
-be accelerated from the equator to the poles proportionably to the
-square of the sine of the latitude, and the weight of the body ought to
-increase in that ratio.”</p>
-
-<p>Assuming the above reasoning to be correct, it follows, that the rate
-of descent of falling bodies will be accelerated in the transition
-from the equator to the poles. Now, it has been before stated that
-the pendulum is a falling body; therefore, with the same length of
-pendulum, the oscillations at the pole should be faster than at the
-equator. Theory, in this case, is verified; for it has been proved by
-experiments, repeated again and again, that a pendulum oscillating
-86,400 times in a mean day at the equator, will give the same number of
-oscillations at any other point, provided its length is made longer in
-the exact ratio as the square of the sine of the latitude.</p>
-
-<p>The sequence to be derived from all the foregoing considerations is,
-that the whole decrease of gravitation from the equator to the poles
-is 0.005.1449, which subtracted from the 1/155.2 gives the amount
-of compression of the earth to be nearly 1/285.26. But this form
-of the earth would give the excess of the equatorial axis over the
-polar about 26¹⁄₂ miles. The measurement is confirmed by Mr. Ivory
-in his investigations on the five principal measurements of arcs of
-the meridian in Peru, India, France, England, and Lapland. He found
-that the law required an ellipsoid of revolution whose equatorial
-radius should be 3,962.824 miles, and the polar 3,949.585 miles; the
-difference is 13.239 miles; this quantity multiplied by two gives
-26.478 as the excess of one diameter over the other. Thus, by two
-different processes the figure of the earth has been determined; but
-another remains that is the result of pure analysis, derived from the
-nutation and precession of the equinoxes&mdash;for, as explained before,
-these effects are caused by the excess of matter at the earth’s
-equator. The calculation does not lead us to certainty, but it does
-show the compression to be comprised between the two fractions ¹⁄₂₇₀
-and ¹⁄₅₇₃. There is this advantage in the lunar theory, that it takes
-the earth as a whole, disregarding any irregularities of surface, or
-the local attractions that influence the pendulum&mdash;the difficulties of
-measuring an arc of the meridian being an obstacle to perfect accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>The form of the earth has, however, a value confined not alone to those
-interested in horology&mdash;it furnishes us with a standard of weights and
-measures. In England and the United States, the pendulum is the unit of
-mensuration, or at least the common standard from which measurement is
-derived. It has been shown that, deducting the effects of nutation, the
-axis of the earth’s rotation is always in the same plane. Now, the mass
-being the same constant quantity, a pendulum oscillating seconds at the
-Greenwich Observatory, has been adopted by the English Government as
-its standard of length. Oscillating in vacuo at the level of the sea,
-at 62° Fahr., Captain Kater found its approximate length to be 39.1393
-inches; as this must be invariable under the same circumstances, it
-becomes a standard for all time. The French deduced their standard from
-the measurement of the ten-millionth part of a quadrant of the meridian
-passing through Formentera and Greenwich. They have also adopted the
-decimal system; yet it seems to prove that nothing under the sun is
-new, for over forty centuries ago the Chinese used the decimal system
-in the division of degrees, weights, and measures.</p>
-
-<p>The antiquity of the pendulum is also shown by the fact that the
-Arabs were in the habit of dividing the time in observations, by its
-oscillations, when Ibn Junis, in the year one thousand, was making
-his astronomical researches. Before we lose sight of the influence
-of the form of the earth on the pendulum, it may be well to state
-another source of disturbance, arising from the combined influence of
-the earth’s rotation and the fact that a body moving in its own plane
-seeks to maintain that plane. It will be seen from the very beautiful
-experiment showing the rotation of the earth, that if a body like a
-pendulum be suspended so as to be free in every direction, and not be
-influenced by the motion of the earth when set in oscillation in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span> any
-plane, that that plane will preserve its line of motion, while the
-earth in its motion beneath the body can be seen to slowly move, as
-though the minute hand of a watch were made stationary while the dial
-revolved. The same principle is the one that maintains the spinning-top
-in a parallel position to the horizon, or the gyrascope in its
-apparently anomalous defiance of all the laws of gravitation. In the
-pendulum this tendency to preserve the same plane of motion becomes a
-cause of error&mdash;slight, it is true, but can be very easily remedied by
-so placing it that the plane of oscillation shall be parallel to the
-equator. It will be readily seen that this precaution will become more
-important as we recede from the equator; for if we were to suspend a
-pendulum at the pole in a true line with the axis of rotation, and if
-the plane of vibration remained constant, the earth would turn once
-around that plane in the diurnal period. During this time there would
-be a continuous torsion on the point of suspension, that would in time
-materially affect the accuracy of the instrument. The reasoning holds
-good for every latitude&mdash;degree of influence being the only difference.</p>
-
-<p>Having given the action of the earth’s form, mass, and rotation on
-the pendulum, there remain the disturbances due to expansion and
-contraction, owing to changes of temperature and those of atmospheric
-causes. The astronomical points to be observed are somewhat too fully
-laid down, but it must be remembered that an exact science requires the
-premises to be fully established before a sequence can be drawn.</p>
-
-<p>As the standard of time depends on the passage of a star or the sun, or
-any known celestial object, at a certain time across the meridian of
-the place where the observation is taken, it was absolutely necessary
-to give the modes of calculation, together with the disturbing causes.
-Moreover, a full appreciation of the indebtedness of horology to
-astronomy could not be obtained without a general knowledge of the
-change of the position of the major axis of the orbit described by the
-earth around the sun. Also, the difference between mean and apparent
-solar time was required to illustrate the use of the tables of equated
-time, the necessity of which will become patent when the use of the
-transit instrument for the establishment of time, or a fixed standard,
-is introduced. Also, the disturbing effects of the sun and moon
-collectively and relatively as to position, could not be passed, as
-they produce the precession of the equinoxes and the nutation of the
-pole&mdash;essential elements in the computation of time.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Watch_and_Chronometer_Jewelling">Watch and Chronometer Jewelling.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h3>NUMBER ONE.</h3>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>This whole subject is well worthy an article both in a scientific and
-mechanical sense, whether we consider the delicacy of the operations
-or the intractable character of the material operated on&mdash;for there
-has been no improvement in the horological trade of more importance to
-accuracy and durability of time-keepers.</p>
-
-<p>The substitution of stone for common brass or gold bearings, was
-prompted by the inevitable wear of the holes from frequent cleaning,
-and the abrasion of the pivots, produced by the accumulation of
-dust with viscid oil; the pivot being cut away, or the hole opened
-too large. So long as the verge and cylinder were the prevailing
-escapements, the necessity for jewelling was not so strongly felt,
-except in the balance holes. The introduction of the lever escapement
-brought with it a better watch,&mdash;capable of more accurate time, but
-demanding an improved construction.</p>
-
-<p>An Italian, in 1723, first introduced the practice of using stone for
-bearings. He not only conceived the idea, but was successful as an
-artisan in making his own jewels; ingenious and skilful as he was,
-however, he encountered obstacles almost insurmountable.</p>
-
-<p>The art of cutting gems, it is true, was at that time well understood,
-but no one had attempted to drill a hole in a hard stone fine enough
-for a properly sized pivot. The watches at that time that were jewelled
-could boast of nothing more than the balance holes, and they were not
-pierced to let the pivot <em>through</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very difficult matter to polish a taper indentation in a stone,
-even with modern appliances,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span> in consequence of the tendency to create
-a <em>tit</em> at the bottom,&mdash;thus throwing the balance staff out of
-upright. The difficulties in the then state of knowledge retarded
-the general introduction of stone-work for many years. The Swiss,
-however, seeing the advantages derived, finally struck out the various
-manipulations with success. Time and experience gave more skill, and
-at the present time it is impossible to find a Swiss watch, even of
-the cheapest class, that is not jewelled in at least four holes. The
-English trade adopted the art later; but even then it did not become
-general for many years. Within a generation, only fine English levers
-were jewelled.</p>
-
-<p>The mere substitution of a harder substance was not the only
-improvement; other conditions necessary to accuracy were insured. The
-hole could be made <em>round</em>&mdash;the material of such a character that
-no chemical action could be effected on the oil used for lubrication,
-and the vertical section of the hole could be made so as to present
-the least amount of frictional surface, yet still giving a perfectly
-polished bearing, thus avoiding the cutting of the pivot.</p>
-
-<p>The whole “<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">modus operandi</i>” from the stone in the rough to the
-last setting up is well worth the attention of the watch repairer, and
-certainly that of the manufacturer.</p>
-
-<p>Of the materials used in the trade, the first and most important is
-the diamond, used only in the time-piece as an end-stone&mdash;but at
-the bench all-important, as a means of making the other jewels. The
-diamond possesses the requisite susceptibility of polish, combined with
-greatest hardness of any substance known; but this adamantine quality
-precludes its being pierced with a through hole. Considered chemically,
-the diamond is pure carbon,&mdash;its different varieties differing only
-in structure&mdash;common charcoal, its lowest&mdash;plumbago, its intermediate
-grade. Another variety, called the “black diamond,” or “diamond
-carbon,” occurs, which is interesting as being a parallel with emery,
-compared with crystallic sapphire. The form of diamond most in use for
-mechanical manipulations, is almost always crystallized; yet it will be
-seen that the agglomerated form of diamond carbon plays no unimportant
-part in jewelling. As a jewel, no use is made of the diamond, other
-than as an end-stone. Marine chronometers, in which the balance will
-weigh from five to nine pennyweights, are almost invariably furnished
-with a diamond end-stone, set in steel. Yet, hard as the substance is,
-it is often that a pivot will cut an indentation in its face. The cause
-of this apparent anomaly is to be found in the structural character of
-the gem, and its value. The lapidary, saving in weight as possible,
-does not care, in “Rose Diamonds,” to pay attention to the lines of
-cleavage. If the face of the stone makes a slight angle with the
-strata of the jewel, there occur innumerable small angles of extreme
-thinness&mdash;the pivot, coming in contact with any of these thin portions,
-may fracture it, and the fragment, becoming imbedded in the tempered
-steel pivot, becomes a drilling tool. In our experience we have had
-marine chronometers sent for repair, that have lost their rate so much
-as to become utterly unreliable from this cause alone&mdash;the pivot having
-produced an indentation of the stone, creating more friction, and thus
-destroying the accuracy of the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>As a general rule, the rose diamonds sold for this purpose are
-sufficiently good for general work. In a very fine watch or chronometer
-the stone should be selected with reference to its polish on the face,
-and its parallelism in the lines of cleavage. The diamond, however,
-gets its great importance from being the only agent we can use in
-working other stones. Without it the whole art of jewelling would not
-be practicable. The various steps are all connected some way with
-diamond in its different shapes. “Bort,” the technical name for another
-variety, is merely fragments of the stone that have been cleaved off
-from a gem in process of cutting, or gems that have been cut, but found
-too full of flaws to become of use for ornamental jewelry purposes,
-the cost depending on the size, varying from $5.50 to $18 per carat.
-This “Bort” is used as turning tools&mdash;the larger pieces being selected
-and “set” in a brass wire and used on the lathe, in the same manner,
-and with the same facility, as the common graver. For tools, even
-the diamond is not of equal value&mdash;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span> pure white and crystalline in
-structure generally being too brittle (though hard) to endure the
-work. Among the workmen the “London smoke,” a clouded, brownish stone,
-is most prized&mdash;it possessing the twofold qualities of toughness and
-hardness.</p>
-
-<p>Another form of “Bort” comes in the shape of a small globule, sometimes
-the size of a pea; it is crystallic, and when fractured generally gives
-very small, indeed minute pieces of a needle shape. These are carefully
-selected, and form the drills with which the English hole-maker
-perforates the jewel. These drills, when found perfect, for soundness,
-form, and size, are very highly prized by the workman, as the choice of
-another, together with the setting, will often take a vast deal of time
-and labor.</p>
-
-<p>“Bort” is also used in the making of the laps or mills with which
-the jeweller reduces the stones to a condition for the lathe and
-subsequent processes. For this purpose such pieces as are not fit for
-cutting-tools, or drills, are selected. A copper disk, having been
-first surfaced and turned off in the lathe, is placed on a block or
-small anvil; each piece of stone is then separately placed on the
-copper, and driven in with a smart blow&mdash;care being taken that no place
-shall occur in the disk that does not present, in revolution, some
-cutting point. It would seem impossible to retain the diamond fragment,
-but it must be remembered that the copper, being a very ductile metal,
-receives the piece; the first rubbing of a hard stone then burnishes
-the burred edges of the indentations over every irregular face of the
-diamond, leaving only a cutting edge to project. The rapidity with
-which such a lap, well charged, will reduce the hardest stone, is
-somewhat marvellous. It is the first tool used in jewelling, and so
-important that a more detailed and explicit description of its make
-will be given when the process of manufacture is treated upon.</p>
-
-<p>Diamond powder is equally as important as “bort,” being used in nearly
-every stage of jewel-making. The coarsest charges the “skives” or
-saws used for splitting up the stone. These skives are made of soft
-sheet-iron, and act on the same principle as the laps. The finer
-grades, in bulk, resemble very much ordinary slate-pencil dust;
-indeed, the latter is often used as an adulteration. This powder is
-not uniform in fineness, and the jewel-maker is under the necessity of
-separating the different grades. This is effected by a simple process
-called “floating off,” and is conducted as follows: A certain quantity
-of powder, say a carat, is put into a pint of pure sweet oil, contained
-in some such shallow vessel as a saucer. Depending on the fluidity of
-the oil, the mixture, after being thoroughly incorporated, is allowed
-to stand undisturbed for about an hour or an hour and a half. During
-this time, owing to their greater gravity, the largest particles are
-precipitated, leaving held in suspension a powder of nearly uniform
-fineness. The mixture is now carefully decanted into another similar
-vessel, leaving the coarse powder at the bottom of the first. This
-coarse deposit is denominated <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1, and is used for skives, laps, and
-other rough purposes. The decanted mixture in the second vessel is
-allowed to remain quiescent for twelve hours, when the same operation
-is performed; and the third vessel now contains most of the oil,
-together with the finest particles of powder. The precipitate from the
-second decantation is the ordinary opening powder; the finest being for
-polishing both the holes and outsides of jewels, and giving the final
-finish to the faces of pallets, roller pins, locking spring jewels, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The good workman is careful to keep the powder in this condition as
-free as possible from any extraneous dust, and above all to preserve
-the different grades from any intermixture, as a small quantity of a
-coarser grade would destroy a finer one for all its purposes, and the
-process of “floating off” would have to be repeated.</p>
-
-<p>The most important stone in jewelling, the diamond, becomes more of an
-agent of the manufacture than an object.</p>
-
-<p>Properly, for jewelling the ruby and sapphire are pre-eminent;
-inferior only to diamond in hardness, possessing a sufficient degree
-of toughness, susceptible of an exquisite polish, this (for they
-are one and the same) stone is the favorite of the Swiss, English,
-and American, for all high class work&mdash;the Swiss, however, using it
-indiscriminately in all watches.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span></p>
-
-<p>The ruby proper is of one color, but in its varieties of intensity
-may change to a very light pink. When still lighter it is ranked a
-sapphire, which comes in almost every possible color and shade, from
-ruby to a perfect transparent colorless crystal. This stone differs
-in degrees of hardness and capacity of working&mdash;the hardest being a
-greenish yellow, in the shape of pebbles, with very slightly rounded
-edges, difficult to work, but forming the strongest and most perfect
-jewel known.</p>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that this description gives the value of the ruby
-and sapphire as a material for jewelling only. For ornamental jewelry,
-the value depending on color, of the most intense ruby or blue for
-sapphire, together with brilliancy and weight. The ruby and sapphire
-are formed on an aluminum base, the common emery being another form of
-structural arrangement, but of the same chemical constitution.</p>
-
-<p>These stones possess every quality to make them the base of perfect
-jewelling; and still the chrysolite is equally in favor with most
-jewellers. It is not quite so hard, but it is more easily worked and
-cheaper in price, and it would be difficult to tell wherein it is
-inferior to either the ruby or sapphire. It has a yellowish tinge,
-verging to the color of the olive. As a stone for jewelry it is not
-fashionable, and only in Persia is it valued. There are, however, some
-very strong objections to its use by the workman; it is not uniform in
-hardness; in polishing it will <em>drag</em>, that is, the surface will
-tear up in the process. Unfortunately the eye is not able to detect
-the fault before working, and it is found only when much preliminary
-time and trouble has been expended. It is susceptible, when good, of a
-perfect polish, and is much used in chronometer work, especially for
-jewelling the 4th hole, as its non-liability to fracture renders it
-valuable.</p>
-
-<p>“Aqua Marine” is a brother to the emerald, differing from it only in
-intensity of color, and composed of the same constituents. These two
-gems are the only ones in which the rare metal, glucinum, has been
-detected. It is extensively used in the American and English watches,
-but never in the Swiss. It is soft, not much harder than quartz, but
-comes in large pieces, perfectly transparent, and of a color which
-is that pure green of sea-water, from which it takes its name, “Aqua
-Marine.”</p>
-
-<p>The garnet in English watches plays an important part for pallets, also
-for roller-pins; a very soft stone, but very porous. When set in the
-pallet with a pointed toothed wheel, it is apt to act as a file from
-its porosity, cutting the end of the tooth. This may be detected in any
-pointed tooth lever watch, by observing the color of the back of the
-tooth. “Black vomit” it used to be called in the Boston factory. Most
-of the garnet used is an Oriental stone, the best quality coming in
-bead form, the holes having been pierced by the natives. The cost of
-piercing the stone in Europe or America would be far above its value.
-The Oriental is the best for Horological purposes, though Hungary and
-Bohemia furnish the most highly prized stones used for ornamental
-purposes; indeed, in some German towns the cutting and setting of the
-garnet is a specialty, giving employment to a large number of people.
-And, strange to say, the best market for their sale is the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p>This comprises about all the stones used in watch and chronometer
-jewelling. Still in clock work the pallets are generally jewelled in
-agate, a stone not at all suited to the purpose, it having, even in
-the best specimens, a decided stratification that prevents an uniform
-surface being formed by any process. The cornelian form of the agate
-is not open to this objection, and makes capital bearings for knife
-edges of fine balances, and compass stones for centres of magnetic
-needles. For watch or chronometer purposes the only really useful
-stones are sapphire, ruby, chrysolite, and aqua marine&mdash;all possessing
-peculiarities that deserve some remarks, as they are of the utmost
-importance to the hole maker. The sapphire is the hardest stone, next
-to the diamond, and yet specimens can be, and are found, so soft as to
-<em>drag</em> in polishing. Again, if stratified very clearly, will “fire
-crack” in opening the hole. The ruby is more uniform in its structure,
-and is more highly prized on that account; its hardness being all that
-is necessary, while its susceptibility of receiving a high polish
-is equal to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span> that of the sapphire or chrysolite. The aqua marine is
-always uniform and may be polished both externally and in the hole with
-“tripoli,” saving something in diamond powder in the process of making.
-In our estimation, however, the chrysolite is the most valuable of all
-the stones. True, when purchased in the rough, many pieces will be
-found unfit for the jeweller’s purpose; but when the right quality is
-found, nothing can be better adapted to jewelling. Hard, it is easily
-wrought, taking a peculiar <em>unctious</em> polish, retaining oil in its
-most limpid condition for a long time.</p>
-
-<p>These stones form the general stock by and from which jewels are made.
-The details of the various manufacturing manipulations, the tools
-used, also the setting in the work, together with the important item
-of the screws, will form the subject of the next article on Watch and
-Chronometer Jewelling. Not having been able to get our engraving done
-in time for publication, we are compelled to reserve the remainder for
-the next number.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Hints_on_Clocks_and_Clock-Making">Hints on Clocks and Clock-Making.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h3>NUMBER ONE.</h3>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Twenty-five years of hard labor amidst the dust and din of machinery,
-with hands cramped, and fingers stiffened by the continual use of
-tools, and with a brain constantly occupied in ringing the changes upon
-wheels and levers in their almost infinite combinations,&mdash;it requires a
-degree of courage to undertake to write anything that can be dignified
-with the name of an “article,” although it does propose to treat upon
-a subject with which we are fairly familiar; but it is consoling to
-think that one is not expected to write for the pages of this practical
-journal with the same degree of elegance and polish that should grace
-the columns of a review or magazine; that we can appear here as plain,
-practical mechanics, and use good hard, round words to express our
-ideas, backed by an experience which should add some weight&mdash;and we
-welcome the appearance of the “American Horological Journal,” which
-is to serve a good purpose by bringing out the actual experience of
-men who have grown gray in the art and mystery of clock-making, and
-preserving, by means of the “art preservative of all arts,” their
-dearly bought knowledge and experience, for the benefit of those who in
-their turn shall follow them; and it will also benefit the people in
-general by giving information that will lead to the purchase of good
-and tasteful clocks for household use.</p>
-
-<p>That such a journal is needed to enlighten us, is made plain by the
-fact that in almost every newspaper we have a vivid account of some
-wonderful clock “recently invented,” which may possess some merit, but
-they are so grossly exaggerated by some ignorant “penny-a-liner,” that
-we are almost led to believe in the Irishman’s marvellous “eight-day
-clock, that actually ran three weeks.” Even the proverbially correct
-“Scientific American,” of which I am a constant reader, has in its
-issue of June 19th, an account in its “editorial summary” of a clock in
-France containing “90,000 wheels,” and perhaps the most curious part
-of the mechanism is that which gives “the additional day in leap-year,”
-etc. Now, it will require but little knowledge of clocks to tell us
-that one with 90,000 wheels was never made and never will be, but “the
-additional day in leap-year” has been given by calendar clocks in this
-country since the year 1853.</p>
-
-<p>It is not proposed in the series of articles to follow, to discuss
-the early history of clocks. Reid and Dennison have written enough
-to convince the most skeptical that the clock is an old invention.
-It is not important to us who invented the pendulum, or this or that
-escapement, but who makes the best pendulum, the best escapement, the
-most perfect train of wheels and pinions. These are vital points, and
-we shall endeavor to give them that attention that their importance
-demands. It is proper to state here that any assertion made, or rule
-given, has been tested, and is the result merely of our experience,
-and we do not claim that it is all there is of the subject; for we are
-aware that the experience of others may have led to results entirely
-different; but if all clock-makers will avail themselves of the columns
-of this journal, we shall not only become<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span> better acquainted by an
-exchange of ideas, but better clock-makers.</p>
-
-<p>The subject of wheels and pinions is of the greatest importance in
-clock-making, and the utmost care and skill are required to execute a
-train which shall not only run with as little friction as possible,
-but the friction must be equal; for if there is no variation in the
-train force, the escapement and pendulum will always be actuated by the
-same amount of power, and the performance of the clock can be relied
-upon. Clock text-books do not fully impress this subject. We find a
-great deal upon this or that escapement, and the different pendulums.
-Dennison has a couple of pages full of abstruse calculations upon a
-method of shifting an extra weight upon a rod, so that the going of a
-clock can be varied one second per day; but if his wheels and pinions
-are not perfect, a large tooth here and there will vary the clock more
-than that.</p>
-
-<p>Reid overawes us with his knowledge of the proper curves of the teeth
-of wheels; but it must have been only theory, for his practice was to
-saw his teeth, and his cycloids, epicycloids, and hypocycloids were
-left to the mercy of the “topping file” in the hands of his “wheel
-teeth finishers,” instead of shaping up the teeth in the engine, as is
-done now. We have generally cut the wheels of fine clocks over several
-times with different cutters before taking them from the engine; the
-last cutter having but one tooth, which can be made perfect as to cut
-and shape, and, running with great speed, will leave the teeth the
-proper shape, very smooth, and as true as the dial of the engine.
-Escape wheels, especially, require great care in cutting, as the
-teeth for dead-beat escapements are somewhat long and thin; the least
-inaccuracy is certain to cause trouble. It is absolutely necessary that
-the dial plate of the cutting engine should be perfectly true, with
-clean, round holes, and a perfect fitting index point, with a cutter
-arbor without end play or lateral motion&mdash;these are the essentials of a
-good cutting engine, without which a good clock cannot be made.</p>
-
-<p>We have generally made a practice, upon the completion of the train for
-a fine clock, to put in the place of the escape-wheel a very light,
-well-balanced fly, to prevent “backlash,” and a very fine soft cord
-on the barrel; then hang on a very light weight; so slight that&mdash;all
-of the wheels being balanced, and no oil upon the pivots&mdash;the fly
-will move so slowly that its revolutions may be counted. By taking
-care that the weight be not too much in excess of the resistance, the
-least inaccuracy in the wheels and pinions may be discovered by the
-difference in the velocity of the fly, or by its suddenly stopping,
-which will be occasioned by any inequality in the train teeth, which
-would not have been discovered by the closest scrutiny. It was by means
-of this test that we discovered an inaccuracy in a pinion, caused by
-hardening, which could not have been discovered by a less delicate test.</p>
-
-<p>The wheels in the train should be as light as possible, for as the
-whole train is stopped every time a tooth drops on the pallets, it is
-plain that the driving weight must overcome the inertia as well as the
-friction of the train at every beat. To this end it has been customary
-to “arm out” the wheels, leaving a very light rim supported by light
-arms, the wheels being generally of cast brass, turned up, and cut,
-then lightened. We followed this plan for some time, but abandoned it,
-as we found great difficulty in making a perfectly round wheel. The
-arms serve as posts to support the rim in cutting or turning, but the
-space between is very apt to spring down. We prefer making the wheels
-of fine hard-rolled sheet brass; it is superior to cast brass, much
-finer, harder, and more durable, and is freer from flaws. After the
-wheels are cut, they are turned out on each side, leaving a thin web in
-the centre; they can be made lighter, finished easier, and are round.</p>
-
-<p>As to the shape of the teeth in clock-wheels, the subject has been so
-ably treated by Reid, Dennison, and <abbr title="professor">Prof.</abbr> Willis (who has invented an
-instrument to assist in laying out the curves for the teeth of wheels),
-that we shall not attempt it in this paper; besides, there is so little
-of the entire theory that can be applied to a clock-wheel of two and
-a half inches in diameter, with 120 to 140 teeth, farther than to
-leave the wheel and pinion of the proper diameter, that we consider it
-unnecessary; for if makers of regulators and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span> other fine clocks will
-use pinions of 16 or 20 teeth, the friction or driving is all after the
-line of centres, and the whole subject of cycloids, epicycloids, and
-hypocycloids is reduced to a very small point, and might be said to
-“vanish into thin air.”</p>
-
-<p>Having given only a few practical hints, and not yet crossed the
-threshold of the subject, we propose to continue from month to
-month&mdash;if the readers of the <span class="smcap">Journal</span> do not weary&mdash;the
-discussion of the various parts that go to make the sum total of a fine
-clock, with notices of the various clocks made in this country.</p>
-
-<hr id="newtools" class="tb" />
-
-<p>It certainly comes within the province, and is the duty, of a journal
-devoted to Horology, to make a note of any and all the new improvements
-that pertain to the science. We give, then, some few, the merits of
-which have struck us as being a very important matter of consideration.</p>
-
-<p>The best clock time-keeper is not absolutely perfect, so its rate must
-be kept; but the watchmaker ordinarily has no means of correcting the
-error of his regulator, until the accumulation renders it a serious
-inconvenience. Did he possess a Transit instrument, properly set and
-adjusted for meridian, together with the required books and knowledge
-of observing, he could from day to day correct his clock and keep
-accurate time; but these are all expensive, as well as involving time
-and labor. Suited to the wants of the artisan is a little instrument
-called the Dipleidescope; simple in its construction, and not liable
-to get out of position or order, it forms the best substitute for the
-transit we have seen. It is founded on the theory that the double
-reflection from the two surfaces of planes at an angle of 60° will
-coincide when the object reflected is in a true line with half the base
-of the whole triangle. Having a prism cut in an equilateral triangle,
-one angle is set directly down toward the centre of the earth, the base
-being brought parallel with the line of the horizon. Now, if the axis
-of the prism is in a line with the meridian, a reflection of the sun
-will appear, at the instant of crossing the meridian, on itself&mdash;that
-is, there would be but one image. If the instrument is well made,
-there can be no doubt of its accuracy and value to those who, wishing
-to verify their time, are not situated so as to use a transit.</p>
-
-<p>Another improvement is a Bench-Key for watchmaker’s use. No one who has
-had any experience at the bench but will appreciate an article that
-facilitates the setting of time-pieces for his customers. In winding,
-it is equally valuable. It is not dependent for its strength of torsion
-on the spring-chuck principle, the power being applied close to the
-square by means of a pin that passes through the key.</p>
-
-<p>Hall’s Patent Cutting Nippers are a positive desideratum; a large
-wire can be cut off without the least jar to the hand, the leverage
-is so great. The smallest sizes are suitable to the ordinary run
-of watch-work, and can be used in clock-work better than any
-cutting-plyers extant. Strong and durable, they possess one quality
-that all watchmakers will appreciate&mdash;if a cutting-jaw is broken it can
-be replaced by another.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Greenwich_Observatory">Greenwich Observatory.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>About two hundred years ago, England began to take a lead in the
-mercantile commerce of the world; her ships were daily passing across
-the Atlantic, and India also was beginning to attract her attention.
-It was therefore of the utmost importance that navigators should be
-enabled to find their longitude when at sea, independently of watches
-or clocks; and a reward was offered to any one who should discover a
-method by which this result might be obtained.</p>
-
-<p>The plan proposed was, that the angular distance of the moon from
-certain stars should be calculated beforehand, and published, so that,
-for example, it might be stated that at ten minutes and five seconds
-past nine on such a day, the moon should be distant from Mars 40
-degrees. If from a ship in the middle of the Atlantic, Mars and the
-moon were found to be 40 degrees apart, then it would be known that the
-time in England was ten minutes and five seconds past nine.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, was one item ascertained, and the method was a good one;
-but in consequence of the want of accuracy as regarded the moon’s
-motions, and the exact positions of the stars, it could not be
-practically carried out.</p>
-
-<p>Under these circumstances, Charles II. decided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span> that a national
-observatory should be built, and an astronomer appointed; and a site
-was at once selected for the building. Wren, the architect, selected
-Greenwich Park as the most suitable locality, because from thence
-vessels passing up and down the Thames might see the time-signals,
-and also because there was a commanding view north and south from
-the hill selected for the site. The observatory was completed in
-1676, and Flamsteed, the chief astronomer, immediately commenced his
-observations, but with very imperfect instruments of his own. During
-thirty years, Flamsteed labored indefatigably, and formed a valuable
-catalogue of stars, and made a vast collection of lunar observations.
-He was succeeded by Halley, who carried on similar observations; and
-from that time to the present, Greenwich Observatory has been our
-head-quarters for astronomical observations.</p>
-
-<p>The work carried on at Greenwich is entirely practical, and consists
-in forming a catalogue of stars and planets, and so watching them
-that every change in their movements is at once discovered. Now that
-this work has been performed for several years, the movements of the
-principal celestial bodies have been so accurately determined, that
-the <i>Nautical Almanac</i>&mdash;the official guide on these subjects&mdash;is
-published four years in advance, and thus we find that on a particular
-night in 1868, the moon will be at a certain angular distance from
-a star, and the second satellite of Jupiter will disappear at a
-particular instant. On the exterior wall of the observatory there is
-a large electric clock, which, being placed in “contact” with the
-various other clocks in the observatory, indicates exact Greenwich
-time. The face of this clock shows twenty-four hours, so that it
-requires that a novice should look at it twice before comparing his
-watch. On the left of this clock are metal bars let into the wall,
-each of which represents the length of a standard measure, such as a
-yard, foot, etc. And let us here say a few words about these standards.
-To the uninitiated a yard is simply three feet, and a foot is twelve
-inches&mdash;an inch being, we are told in our “Tables,” the length of three
-barleycorns. Now, as the length of a barleycorn varies considerably, it
-requires something more definite than this to determine our national
-measures. Thus, the question, what <em>is</em> a foot? is more difficult
-to answer than at first sight appears. Many years ago the French
-perceived the difficulty appertaining to the national standard, and
-they, therefore, decided that a metre should be the ten-millionth part
-of one-fourth of the earth’s circumference&mdash;that is, ten-millionth
-of the distance from the Equator to the Pole. But here another
-difficulty was encountered, because different calculators found this
-arc of different lengths. By <em>law</em>, however, it was decided
-that one measurement only was correct, and so the metre was fixed at
-3.0794 Paris feet; though since then, more accurate observations and
-improved instruments have shown these measured acres to have been
-very incorrectly ascertained, and thus the French method failed when
-practically tried.</p>
-
-<p>The length of a seconds pendulum oscillating in a certain latitude
-has been our method of obtaining a standard; but this also has its
-weak points, so that to obtain a constant standard it is necessary to
-have some pattern which is unchangeable, and thus a metal has been
-chosen that expands or contracts but little either with heat or cold;
-and this, at a certain temperature, is <em>the</em> standard measure,
-and such a standard may be seen on the exterior wall of Greenwich
-Observatory.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the doorway&mdash;which is guarded by a Greenwich pensioner,
-who will possibly first peep at the visitor, in order to see who
-the individual may be who is desirous to tread within the sacred
-precincts&mdash;one finds a court-yard, on the left of which are the
-transit-room, the computing-room, and the chronometer-room. The
-transit room takes its name from the instrument therein, which is
-a large “transit.” This consists of a large telescope, the outside
-of which is not unlike a heavy cannon, as it is of solid iron. The
-instrument is supported by trunnions, which allow the telescope to be
-elevated or depressed to point south or north, and, in fact, to make
-a complete revolution, but never to diverge from the north or south
-line. The magnifying power of this instrument is not very great, so
-that it admits plenty of light, for it is intended, not as a searcher
-for or for gazing at celestial objects, but for the purpose of noting
-the exact time at which stars and planets pass south or north of
-Greenwich. Upon looking through this telescope, the observer’s eye
-is first attracted by a vertical row of what seem to be iron bars,
-placed at equal distances from each other. These, however, prove to be
-only spiders’ webs, and are used for the purpose of taking the time
-of passage of a star over each wire, and thus to ascertain the exact
-instant of its being in the centre of the telescope. During even the
-finest and calmest nights, there is occasionally found a tremulousness
-in the instrument, which, as it is rigidly fixed to the walls of the
-building, must be due to a slight vibration in the ground itself. Thus,
-many a feeble earthquake unfelt by the outsider may be perceived by the
-astronomer by the aid of his delicate instruments.</p>
-
-<p>The various stars seem to be travelling at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span> an immense rate when
-seen in the field of the transit telescope, and it is really nervous
-work noting the exact time when each wire is passed. The experienced
-observer, however, not only will give the minute and second, but also
-the decimal of a second when the star was on the wire. The result is
-obtained by counting the beats of a clock the face of which is opposite
-the observer. Thus, if at three the star seems as much short of the
-wire as at four it had passed it, then 3.5 might be the instant of
-“transit.”</p>
-
-<p>At noon each day the sun’s passage is observed by nearly the whole
-staff of observers. One individual looks through the telescope, and
-gives the time for each wire, while others examine a variety of
-micrometers in order to ascertain the fractional parts of seconds,
-etc.,&mdash;these micrometers being placed at the side of the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, the principal work consists in making what are termed
-the “reductions” to the observations of the previous night. These
-reductions are the corrections requisite for the slight instrumental
-inaccuracy, for the refraction of the atmosphere, and for the known
-constant error of the observer. When, therefore, a bright winter’s
-night has occurred, the work on the following morning is usually very
-heavy. At noon the sun’s time of transit is taken, and at one o’clock
-the “ball” is dropped, by means of which the various vessels in the
-Docks and in the Thames set their chronometers, or ascertain their
-rate. In addition to this, the time is sent by electricity to Deal and
-one or two other seaports, in order that every vessel may be able to
-know the accurate time, if within sight of those places.</p>
-
-<p>Not the least interesting portion of the observatory is the chronometer
-room. For a very small charge, manufacturers or owners may have their
-chronometers rated at Greenwich, which is accomplished in the following
-manner:</p>
-
-<p>The chronometer is placed in the chronometer room, and compared with
-the large electric clock in the room, this clock being kept in order
-by the stars. Each day the chronometer is examined, and thus its rate
-is ascertained in its then temperature. It is afterwards placed in a
-sort of closet warmed by gas, a condition supposed to represent the
-tropics, and it is there kept for a certain period, being tested each
-day as before. This change of temperature is found to produce very
-little effect on the best instruments, which, when they have passed
-the ordeal, are returned to the owners with their character ticketed
-to them. Some hundred chronometers are often placed in this room; and
-to compare them is a science, the “expert” by a glance discovering the
-difference between the two instruments, whilst a novice would require
-to mentally add or subtract, and thus slowly to arrive at the same
-results.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it becomes dark enough to see stars by the aid of a
-telescope, one of the staff commences his observations. These are
-continued during the night; and a register is kept of each star,
-planet, comet or moon, which is “doctored” in the morning by the
-computers.</p>
-
-<p>As all mortals are fallible, it is desirable to bring machinery into
-use where possible, and this has been managed in connection with
-astronomical observations. Instead of the computer registering by
-judgment the time of a star’s transit over the various wires, he
-strikes a small indicator, which, completing the electric circuit,
-causes a pricker to fall and make a hole in a piece of paper that
-is attached to a slowly revolving barrel. Each time the star passes
-a wire, the pricker descends and leaves its mark; and the interval
-between these marks being measured by scale, the mean time of transit
-may be obtained.</p>
-
-<p>There is usually a feeling of the sublime that comes over us when we
-reflect upon the vast unexplored regions of space, or contemplate the
-stellar world that shines upon us. The magnitude and grandeur of some
-of the planets in the solar system strike us with a feeling of awe
-and wonder, while we are puzzled at the mysteries attending comets,
-double stars, nebulæ, etc. No such feelings or sentiments, however,
-are allowed to enter into the constitution or mind of an observer at
-Greenwich. Saturn, the glorious ringed planet, with its galaxy of
-moons, is simply “Saturn, Right Ascension 10 hours 8 min. 12 sec.,
-North declination 16° 12´ 2´´.” Anything appertaining to the physical
-constitution, the probable cause of the ring, or the object of so
-grand an orb, does not come within the range of the observations at
-Greenwich, which are limited to bare matter-of-fact business work.</p>
-
-<p>The southern portion of the observatory ground is devoted to
-the investigation of meteorological subjects, and is under the
-superintendence of Mr. Glaisher, who is now well known as an aerial
-voyager. It is here that an exact record is kept of the amount of
-rain that daily falls, of the direction and force of the wind, of
-the magnetic changes, of the temperature, amount of ozone, etc.&mdash;all
-matters which may, and probably will, lead us eventually to the
-discovery of some laws connected with the states of weather, and enable
-us to predict what may be expected from day to day. Whilst we are now
-able to calculate to a few seconds, and for years in advance, the
-instant when an eclipse may occur, and to explain the causes of the
-various planetary movements, yet we are in a sad state of ignorance
-as regards the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span> causes of hurricanes, thunder-storms, continued rains
-and droughts; and thus we find that all the would-be prophets who
-from time to time spring up and oracularly announce a coming frost
-or fine weather, or the reverse, are perpetually meeting with most
-signal failures, which, however, does not deter future adventurers from
-attempting to gain a cheap temporary renown by trying their luck at a
-prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>The perpetual accumulation of facts at Greenwich, whether these be of
-an astronomical nature, or appertaining to the air we breathe and its
-subtle changes, is a proceeding that must eventually lead us on to a
-correct knowledge of the laws which govern these matters, and also keep
-us acquainted with any variations that may be occurring in the elements
-that surround us.</p>
-
-<p>The order and quietness necessary in such calculations as those carried
-on at Greenwich prevent it from being a “show” establishment, and
-hence visitors are not admitted except on special business. Then,
-however, every aid and assistance are offered to the student and
-inquirer; the use of books and instruments is freely given, and such
-information supplied as the little spare time of those belonging to the
-establishment enables them to afford. Thus a visit to or a period of
-study at Greenwich Observatory will amply repay those who wish to gain
-the latest and most accurate information on astronomical subjects, or
-to practise themselves at the adjustments and use of the instruments;
-and to those who have not such opportunity, we offer this slight sketch.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-[<i>Chambers’ Journal.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Pinions">Pinions.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Well made as to truth of centring, of division, of form of leaves, and
-polish, are, as the trade well knows, of vital importance to the value
-of the time-piece.</p>
-
-<p>The making and finishing is one of the most troublesome, as well
-as most expensive of all the processes in watch work. The nature
-of the material renders it difficult as it approaches so nearly in
-hardness to the tools used in cutting. In the ordinary Yankee clock,
-the <em>lantern pinion</em> has entirely superseded the solid leaf,
-which substitution was the greatest element of success in their cheap
-construction. The lantern pinion is really a nearer approximation to
-the required anti-frictional form than a majority of cut pinions in
-ordinary clocks. In the process of manufacture of the cut variety, the
-first consideration is the quality of the steel to be used. For this
-purpose it should be carefully selected by trial, thus ascertaining
-its fineness, uniformity, softness when annealed, together with its
-capacity for taking a good temper, with the least amount of springing
-during the hardening process. Very few pinions are cut from the solid
-piece&mdash;the drawn pinion wire being quite good enough, when milled and
-finished, for the ordinary run of watch work.</p>
-
-<p>The steel wire having been selected, the first process is to cut it
-up in lengths a trifle larger than the required pinion. The separated
-pieces are then centred with care, and having been placed in a lathe,
-the staff and pivot are turned up to nearly the required gauge, leaving
-a portion of the whole piece the full size for the leaves. They are
-now taken to the milling tool to have the proper form given to the
-leaves. As this form is of the highest importance, it may be as well to
-give here the reasons. Supposing a wheel of 60 teeth, depthing into a
-pinion of 8 leaves, it can readily be seen that the arc of the motion
-of the wheel tooth is of greater radius than that of the leaf of the
-pinion, and it follows that if the teeth and the leaves are made in
-taper form with straight sections, there must occur a sliding motion
-on the surfaces of both&mdash;the power thus absorbed being totally wasted;
-but if we curve the surfaces we may approach a form so nearly perfect
-that the wheel teeth, being motors, really roll on the leaves, avoiding
-almost entirely the friction caused by sliding; the necessity for this
-curvature becoming greater the more the wheel exceeds the pinion in
-diameter. This curve, which has been demonstrated by very profound
-mathematical researches, is the “epicycloidal;” theoretically it should
-give no more sliding motion than the surfaces of two plain wheels
-revolving on each other. To obtain this perfect form, very great pains
-have been taken and expenses incurred, especially by the makers of the
-best time-keepers.</p>
-
-<p>In the American factories the cutters are very elaborately made,
-the section being an object of great solicitude&mdash;it being an exact
-counterpart of the space between any two leaves, and also of one-half
-the top of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span> leaf from the curvature to the point, so that in
-milling, the space made by the cutter is its shape, leaving the leaf
-of the proper form. Generally the pinion passes under two cutters; the
-first to strike down the rough stock, the other to dress it to size and
-shape, with a light cut. The care and skill required to make these is
-certainly very great, and it is a proof of the wonderful ingenuity of
-man that they are made so perfect as to shape and cutting power.</p>
-
-<p>A very ingenious device is used for dividing the leaves under the
-cutter, which revolves at a moderate speed over a slide, carrying a
-pair of centres, between which the turned up piece of pinion wire is
-placed. The slide is now pushed up to and under the cutter, and in
-its passage as much of a cut is taken as is desirable; in drawing
-back the slide the fresh cut space passes under a flat piece of thin
-steel, screwed on the frame, and set at a slight angle to the axis of
-the centres. On moving the slide towards the cutter for a fresh cut,
-the steel plate takes the last cut, and in passing by it the pinion
-is turned just as much as the angularity of the plate, which must be
-just one leaf. By this very clever device the division is effected
-without an index plate. This process, however, is not good enough for
-work intended to be very accurate&mdash;the pinion wire not being always, or
-indeed rarely correctly divided, the original error will be perpetuated
-in all the subsequent processes. These are all milled, with oil or soda
-water for a lubricator, and it follows that the speed of the cutter is
-regulated to get the greatest cut without dulling the tool. When dull,
-however, the mill is sharpened on the <em>face</em> of the cutting tooth
-by means of small grinders of iron, using Arkansas oil-stone dust for
-the first grinding, and giving the necessary delicacy of the edge by
-means of crocus, or sharp, followed, when fine work is needed, by rouge.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary that this care should be taken, for if the edge is
-left coarse it will become speedily dulled, and leave a very unequal
-and rough surface on the cut of the pinion, which in the subsequent
-grinding gives rise to error in shape and size. The pinions, thus
-cut to gauge, are dried in sawdust, hardened, and tempered; the
-staff and pivots are now turned up to size, and then pass to the
-polishers. In the factory they are finished by means of what are called
-<em>Wig-Wags</em>, which it may be interesting to the reader to have a
-general description of.</p>
-
-<p>Two Vs are arranged as centres, the pinion is placed between them,
-the circular parts resting in each V, but free to turn on its own
-axis. Immediately above the Vs is a frame on which a slide, carrying
-the polisher, may traverse&mdash;generally about two inches. This slide is
-movable vertically so as to accommodate itself to the pinion; attached
-to the slide is a connection which leads to a vertical lever, which
-is put in motion from a crank on the counter shaft. The grinding is
-effected by bringing the grinder, charged with oil-stone dust in oil,
-in one of the spaces of the pinion, which, of course, is so arranged
-as to bring it parallel and central with the grinder. The power being
-applied, the slide takes a very rapid reciprocatory motion, and the
-face of the grinder, so charged, rapidly reduces the uneven surface
-left by the cutter to what is called the <em>gray</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The form of this grinder must be as perfect as the cutters, and the
-care taken to get the requisite parallelism is in equal proportion,
-and in all the best polishers is planed up while in its position. The
-grinder is composed of tin and lead, with sometimes a slight admixture
-of antimony, rolled to an even thickness, cut off in suitable lengths,
-and then mounted in the carrier of the Wig-Wag to be planed up to
-shape. There are too many minute adjustments in the machine to render a
-full description in this article admissible. It is large compared with
-the work it has to perform, but it is very admirably made, as indeed
-all the tools are, in the American factories.</p>
-
-<p>The polishing of the leaves is the next step, and this is effected by
-means precisely the same as grinding. In each stage the pinions are
-thoroughly cleansed before entering on another. The polisher is made
-precisely like the grinder; but instead of oil-stone dust, crocus mixed
-with oil is substituted. Owing to the less cutting quality of the
-material used, the polisher loses its form sooner than the grinder,
-and has to be more frequently reshaped. In very fine work the crocus
-is succeeded by fine well-levigated rouge to bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span> up that jet black
-polish, which is considered a mark of quality by chronometer and watch
-makers.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of turning up the staff and pivots, all the work
-hitherto described has been expended on the leaves&mdash;a very tedious
-process, yet done, when the tools and materials are in proper order,
-with marvellous rapidity; but tedious as these have been, there are two
-others quite as much so before the leaves are finished.</p>
-
-<p>The ends are to be faced&mdash;they must be flat (that is a true plane) and
-receive the same finish that the leaves took, and is effected by the
-wig-wag; only the pinion revolves between centres, at a high speed, the
-grinder being brought up to the turned face. Two motions operate&mdash;one
-rectilinear, the other circular&mdash;the result being a compound motion
-which prevents the grinder from touching the same spot twice in
-succession. To effect this more surely, the operator gives the grinder
-a slight vibratory vertical motion. The polishing of the two faces is
-effected in the same manner as the grinding; in all cases the cutting
-face of the grinders and polishers being kept in a plane perpendicular
-to the axis of the pinion, both vertical and horizontal.</p>
-
-<p>The staff and pivots being in the same condition they came from the
-lathe, the next step is to grind and polish them. Before, however, we
-treat on this process, it may not be amiss to give the general watch
-repairer a process by which the facing may be done on a small scale.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, when the watch repairer has to replace a pinion he selects
-one from the material dealer, finished in the leaves, but not on the
-ends or faces. The following operations are simple, and any one may
-finish these faces with little trouble. Having turned up your pivots
-and squared down the face of the leaves with the turning tool, grind
-it in the lathe by means of a ring of metal, the inside diameter being
-somewhat larger than the diameter of the staff. This ring is held
-between two centres, thus allowing it a vibratory motion, so that
-when it comes up to the face it accommodates itself to its plane, and
-thus has no tendency to force it out of a true flat; the ring, being
-larger than the staff or pivot, admits a small lateral motion, enough
-to effect a continuous change of surface. The same little tool may be
-used for polishing by substituting another polisher and using crocus
-and rouge. For the repairer, perhaps on general work the rouge would
-be superfluous. Vienna lime, used with a little slip of boxwood,
-brings up a very fine and brilliant polish, and in replacing new work
-in an injured time-piece, the steel may always be polished with great
-rapidity by using the lime on the gray surface left from the oil-stone
-dust; being quickly done and affording a very handsome finish.</p>
-
-<p>To resume the consideration of the pinion, the last stage is the
-polishing of the circular portions. Here again the wig-wag is the
-most useful tool, but it operates somewhat differently, for the
-grinder or polisher is pressed down by the finger of the operator,
-the pinion being held between the centres of a small lathe attached
-to the wig-wag; the staff is first ground and polished as the leaves
-have been before, and this is the last operation performed with the
-pinion between centres. From this stage it is chucked in a lathe very
-peculiarly fitted, the mandrel being hollow; and in it is fitted what
-is called a pump-centre, which is movable in direction of the axis of
-the mandrel, and capable of being securely fastened at any desired
-point. On the nose of the mandrel is secured a hollow steel chuck,
-the two sides of which have been filed out, thus leaving an open
-space between the end of the pump-centre and the end of the chuck. On
-this end a small steel plate, extremely thin, is fastened by means
-of shellac, and a hole drilled in the plate capable of taking in the
-chamfer on the shoulder of the pivot. The pump-centre being drawn
-back, the pinion is introduced into the chuck, the pivot placed in the
-hole in the steel plate, and the pump centre is drawn forward until
-it forces the chamfer to fill the hole; the pivot projecting from
-the chuck is now ready for all the grinding and polishing processes.
-Here the wig-wag steps in again, and from the delicacy of the pivots
-is modified to suit the case; this is done by having a polisher hung
-in the wig-wag on centres, so it may revolve; when in operation one
-side of the polisher rests on the pivot, the other on a ruby placed
-in a screw, and which screw enables the operative to insure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span> the
-parallelism of the pivot. The ends of the pivots are next rounded off
-and finished in another set of tools. The pinion is now ready for use,
-assuming it to be of the proper gauge. In the American watches the
-scape and fourth wheels are generally staked on the staff pinch tight;
-the third and centre are staked on the pinion leaves, a rebate having
-been turned down on the ends, the wheel set on the shoulder, and the
-projecting ends of the leaves riveted down. This has not been designed
-as an exhaustive article on pinions; it is merely intended to open the
-subject as pursued in the factories. There is much more to be said; and
-the various processes on the small scale, as performed by the Swiss
-and English, together with their tools, will bear more than a general
-description, as they are applicable at any watch bench.</p>
-
-<p>The subject will be continued, in the effort to give a full and useful
-article.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="New_Three-Pin_Escapement">New Three-Pin Escapement.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>A contributor to the <i>London Horological Journal</i> gives the
-following description of his invention:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The merit of this escapement is in a newly invented escape-wheel
-which is self-locking and requires no banking pins; the pallets are
-curved inside the impulse and outside the locking, to work with the
-curved points of the teeth of the wheel; being made of gold the wheel
-will go without oil. From its form it has the power of double impulse
-and double locking with the lever. The first takes place at the
-discharge of the escapement, the second does not act unless the watch
-receives a sudden motion, and then the pin or pallet in the roller
-strikes lightly on the lever, when the propellant power drives it back
-again. The balance passes through two turns before the second locking
-takes place, and is formed so as to be able to take up the lever,
-and the watch soon rights itself, and its time will not be affected.
-Another advantage is, that the lever is made of a flat piece of steel,
-as I have introduced a gold stud to receive the ruby impulse stone,
-which is made to adjust easily so as to bring the escapement to the
-closest geometrical accuracy. By its formation this ruby guides the
-impulse to the external edge of the roller notch. These advantages,
-and its simplicity, render it suitable to the best chronometer
-watches.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A <span class="allsmcap">FEW</span> years ago, in 1859 or ’60, Mr. Peabody, a very talented
-gentleman of this city, patented a three-pin escapement that performed
-extremely well. A full description of his patent and plan is not at
-hand, but we will endeavor to give it to our readers in our next issue.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="English_Opinion_of_American_Watch_Manufacture">English Opinion of American Watch Manufacture.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>In the London circle of Horologists, more attention is paid to the
-scientific departments than the mercantile; but for all that, a Mr.
-Henry Ganney has held forth before the “British Horological Institute,”
-on “American Watch Manufacture.” Though an Englishman, with English
-prejudices, he certainly gives a very fair and impartial statement
-of the subject; yet he views it almost entirely in the money-making
-aspect. He gives all the credit deserved to American enterprise and
-ingenuity, and yet there is a certain sense of a drawback. He had
-before him samples of machine work; among others, to quote, “several
-movements made by the British Watch Company, which flourished and
-failed about twenty-five years ago; these were machine-made, and the
-perfection and completeness of the machinery they used for producing
-these frames has not been equalled, I believe, in America; several
-machines being used there to accomplish what was begun and completed by
-one here.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ganney is right in his statement, but the example given by the
-British Watch Company was the rock seen by the American navigators. One
-tool, for facing off, truing up, drilling, depthing, and doing all the
-work on the pillar plate, having cost, before completion, some three
-thousand pounds sterling, and from its very complexity being utterly
-inefficient&mdash;worse than useless. In the very inception of the American
-watch manufacture a similar mistake was almost made. Experience and
-sound reasoning proved, however, that a multiplicity of operations in
-any one machine rendered it entirely too complex, the adjustments too
-numerous, and the work totally worthless. We shall in another number
-refer again to Mr. Ganney’s lecture, and perhaps give some beamings of
-light on the early history of the American watch manufacture,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span> derived
-from personal observation at the time.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Correspondence">Correspondence.</h2>
-</div><hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>
-
-<span class="smcap">Editors Horological Journal</span>:<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>I received a Prospectus a few days ago advising me of your
-contemplated existence. I could hardly believe the fact; “the news
-was too good to be true.” However, I shall take it for granted, for I
-cannot see why somebody has not before had the enterprise to launch
-out in the periodical line on subjects connected with Horology, the
-field being so extensive and the want so severely felt. Enclosed
-I send you the subscription price; in this much I have accepted
-your invitation, but I also enclose some few lines on a subject not
-particularly practical or theoretical, but very near the truth, and
-may perhaps give you a view of our wants.</p>
-
-<p>To tell the “plain unvarnished truth,” I am a watch repairer, located
-in a small country village, with a decent stock of tools and a
-moderate trade. In all this I am no exception; so I write this in
-the name of all who are similarly situated. Isolated as we are, we
-(the country village watch repairers) have few means to improve our
-knowledge of the trade, but work on the same old principles learned
-when we were boys and apprentices, and of better and more expeditious
-ways of doing our work we are entirely oblivious. True, our friends
-of the Hebraic persuasion, who, angel like, bring us face to face
-with the outer horological world by selling us material and tools,
-occasionally present to our benumbed vision something new, such as a
-Swiss lathe, or lathes used in the factories; but of what use are they
-to us? We purchase one; well, on the bench it may be an ornament, but
-for use, drilling large holes is the height of our ambition. We have
-not the time to learn by self-experience all the boasted usefulness
-and capacities of the tool; so we go back to our old verge or Jacot
-lathe when we have to put in a pivot or a new staff. We may know all
-about the escapement and be able to detect the cause of any trouble
-with it, but we have no knowledge of the latest modes of repairing the
-injury when it is discovered, and this knowledge is what I hope to
-find in your journal. I live in a section where the general class of
-work is of a very low grade, even the old verge being very common. Our
-stock of material has to be heavy in proportion to our trade, and then
-once in a while we are compelled to send our work to the city, some
-sixty miles distant, in consequence of not being able to do it, either
-from a lack of the material or want of a proper tool. To all intents
-and purposes we remain as stationary as the oyster. Not only do we
-have these vexations, but the ignorance of the public at large as to
-the treatment of their time-keepers is a fruitful source of annoyance;
-we are often charged with fraudulent practices, and a certain degree
-of caution is observed by more than the most ignorant. Thus, a few
-days ago, a stalwart son of the Green Isle made his appearance in
-front of the counter, and, projecting in front of our optics a huge
-English double-cased verge watch, spoke in almost dramatic tones:</p>
-
-<p>“Plase, sir, av’ ye could make me ticker here go, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>Answering in the affirmative we reached for the silent “ticker.” He
-drew back with alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Bedad, an’ ye’ll not stale a morsle frae this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but let me see the watch.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ will ye let me eyes be on yes all the time?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ yes’ll not stale a jewil?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thin, there it is.”</p>
-
-<p>On looking at the movement the verge was found broken, the injury
-explained, and the price given. He decided on the repairs being done,
-but said, “ Give me the watch now and when ye gets the thing fixed its
-meself will come and git it and pay yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we cannot repair the watch without having it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, thin, ye’ll not have it; ye’ll be taking something frae it.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, this is an extreme case of ignorance, pardonable, perhaps,
-in this instance, but the public embraces multitudes just as
-ignorant where an allowance cannot be made. I do not expect the
-<span class="smcap">Journal</span> to reach such cases, or to influence the general
-mass, but my hope is that it will, by raising the general self-respect
-and tone of the repairers, indirectly elevate the respect felt for
-them by the public at large.</p>
-
-<p>But I am writing too long and rambling a letter. I wish to express my
-hearty wishes for your prosperity. And, in conclusion, will you allow
-me to express a hope that you will give us the knowledge we need&mdash;that
-is, post us up on the minutiæ of repairing in the latest styles, the
-newest processes devised, and, above all, give us an article on the
-lathe and its uses?</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="mr">Yours truly,</span><br />
-W. L. C.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>We have the pleasure to give our correspondent the assurance that an
-expert will contribute to our next number an article interesting as
-well as valuable in instruction as to the use of the lathe.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Eclipse_of_the_Sun">Eclipse of the Sun.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The approaching total eclipse of the sun, on the 7th of August next,
-is exciting much interest. The obscuration first occurs in latitude
-39° 53´ 3´´ north, longitude 138° 37´ 4´´ west&mdash;Washington being the
-meridian. The first totality is on the Pacific coast of Siberia, at
-sunrise, in lat. 52° 41´ 9´´ north, and long. 165° 26´ 4´´ west. The
-eclipse is total at noon in Alaska, lat. 61° 46´ 9´´ north, and long.
-68° 4´ 6´´ west. The line of the total eclipse now runs south-easterly,
-grazing the coast near Sitka, thence north into British America; then
-entering the United States, near the head of Milk River, long. 30° W.;
-thence through the south-west corner of Minnesota, diagonally through
-Iowa, crosses the Mississippi at Burlington; thence through Illinois,
-a little north of Springfield, crosses the Ohio river at or near
-Louisville, Ky., passes through the south-west corner of West Virginia,
-through North Carolina, just south of Raleigh, ending on the Atlantic
-coast at sunset, just north of Beaufort, N. C., in lat. 31° 15´ 2´´
-north, and long. 9° 36´ 6´´ east. The line thus described will be that
-of totality, only partial in any other part of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>The United States Government is, or has been, establishing a meridian
-line at Springfield, partly to make observations on this coming
-eclipse, and with the further view of determining a standard of
-surveyed lines&mdash;all of the Government surveys in Illinois having been
-geodetic. Professor Austin, of the Smithsonian Institute, is in charge
-of the work, aided by an able corps of assistants.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Diamond-Cutting">Diamond-Cutting.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>At the Great Exhibition in Paris, in a part of the park contiguous to
-the Netherland section, M. Coster, of Amsterdam, has erected a building
-wherein all the processes of diamond-cutting are carried on.</p>
-
-<p>The first rough shaping of the more important facets of the brilliants
-is here seen performed by the workman, who operates on two diamonds at
-once, by bruising each against the other, angle against angle. The dust
-that falls from the stones is preserved for the subsequent processes
-of grinding and polishing those facets that distinguish the many-sided
-brilliant from the dull, original crystal of the diamond. It is used,
-mingled with oil, on a flat iron disk, set revolving with vast rapidity
-by steam-power, the stone itself being held upon this disk or wheel by
-a tool to which it is attached by a mass of fusible metallic alloy,
-into which the stone is skilfully inserted. Skill of eye and hand, only
-attainable by great practice, is needed for this work; but a skill not
-less exact is needed for another process, which may here be seen in
-daily operation&mdash;the process of cleavage. The diamond, when a blow is
-struck on an edged tool placed parallel to one of the octahedral faces
-of the crystal, readily splits in that direction. But to recognize the
-precise direction on the complex and generally rounded form of the
-diamond crystal; to cut a little notch by means of a knife edge of
-diamonds formed of one of the slices cleaved from a crystal, and to
-cut that notch exactly the right spot; then to plant the steel knife
-that is to split the diamond precisely in the right position; finally,
-with a smart blow, to effect the cleavage so as to separate neither
-too large nor small a portion of the stone&mdash;these various steps in the
-process need great skill and judgment, and present to the observer
-the interesting spectacle which a handicraft dependent on experience
-of hand and eye always affords. But Mr. Coster’s exhibition has other
-objects of interest. For the first time, we may see here, side by side,
-the diamond with the minerals that accompany it in the river beds of
-Brazil; and there are even examples in which crystals of diamonds
-are included within a mass of quartz crystals, which have all the
-appearance of having been formed simultaneously with deposits of the
-diamond.</p>
-
-<p>The different districts of Rio and of Bahia are thus represented&mdash;the
-former producing a confusedly crystallized sort of diamond termed
-“bort,” and the latter an opaque black variety; both these kinds being
-found associated with the crystallized diamonds used for jewelry.
-Though useful in state of powder, the black carbon and “bort” are
-incapable of being cut as a jewel.&mdash;<i>“Maskelyne’s Report,” Great
-Exhibition.</i></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Alloys_of_Aluminum_with_Copper">The Alloys of Aluminum with Copper.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When Sir Humphrey Davy announced the fact that soda, lime, potash,
-magnesia, and the other alkalies were but oxides of a metallic base, it
-would have been deemed chimerical to have supposed that the discoveries
-he made by the expensive aid of the battery would at later date become
-of really commercial value. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span> did obtain both sodium and potassium
-in the metallic state. The substances in this form were new to the
-chemical world, still more strange to the popular. So new was it to the
-chemists, that, on a globule of the reduced sodium being presented to
-a very distinguished chemist, he, with some enthusiasm, examined it;
-and, admitting the fact of its being a metal, exclaimed, “how heavy
-it is!”&mdash;when the real fact was that its specific gravity was less
-than water; the expression was the result of the general preconceived
-opinion that a high specific gravity was a test of a metallic body. It
-was reserved for a French chemist, Henry <abbr title="saint">St.</abbr> Claire Deville, to utilize
-the metal sodium, and that, too, in such a manner that the demand
-aroused attention to its production;&mdash;demand will inevitably bring a
-supply.</p>
-
-<p>The original reduction was made by Davy, by means of the voltaic
-battery. After it had been proved that these bases were really metals
-capable of reduction, chemistry brought all its resources to bear on
-the problem, and they were produced by other methods than the battery.
-All the processes adopted, however, were too expensive and laborious,
-involving an extraordinary amount of complicated manipulations with but
-inadequate results. The metal sodium, which is the immediate subject of
-our inquiry, long remained an object simply of curiosity or experiment
-in the laboratory.</p>
-
-<p>The methods of reducing the metal have of late years been so simplified
-that, to quote <abbr title="professor">Prof.</abbr> Chas. A. Joy in the <i>Journal of Applied
-Chemistry</i>: “A few years ago a pound of this metal could not have
-been purchased for two hundred dollars, and even at that price there
-were few manufacturers hardy enough to take the order. At the present
-time it can be readily manufactured for seventy-five cents, if not for
-fifty cents a pound; and the probabilities are that we shall soon be
-able to obtain it for one-quarter of a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>Deville found that by the reaction of the metallic sodium on common
-chloride of aluminum a reduction was effected; the chlorine taking
-up the sodium, forming chloride of sodium (common salt), while the
-aluminum was left free in the metallic state. It is hardly necessary
-to go into the particulars of the process; but a metal well known to
-exist, had, for the first time, been brought to the world in such a
-condition of structure that its qualities could be tested, not only
-chemically, but mechanically. This was the direct result of Deville’s
-metallurgic process of obtaining the reducing agent&mdash;sodium.</p>
-
-<p>Aluminum in itself would be of but little use, so that a brief
-description will be all that is necessary. It is about the color of
-silver, but susceptible of a higher polish, especially on a fresh-cut
-surface; it is much less susceptible of oxidization than silver; its
-specific gravity is but little more than pine wood, and its tenacity,
-ductility, and laminating qualities are nearly equal to silver. Its use
-in the mechanical arts is limited, notwithstanding all these qualities,
-from the fact of its low point of fusibility, and at the heat of
-the fusible point being easily oxidized, so much so as to prevent
-soldering, except by an autogenous process. But aluminum does possess
-a property peculiar to itself&mdash;that of forming a purely and strictly
-<em>chemical alloy</em> with copper. It unites with it in any proportion;
-the compound formed by the addition of 10 per cent. of aluminum to 90
-per cent. of copper has been found to possess all the properties of
-an entirely new metal, with qualities that render it a very valuable
-material in all fine work, such as astronomical instruments; and very
-fine machinery, such as watch-lathes, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The French reports on the alloy are somewhat voluminous, but we give
-the following.</p>
-
-<p>The color of this bronze so closely resembles that of 18 carat gold,
-such as is used for the best jewelry and watch-cases, that it is
-capable of receiving the highest polish, and is far superior in beauty
-to any gilding.</p>
-
-<p>Samples taken from different parts of the largest castings, when
-analyzed, show the most complete uniformity of composition, provided
-only that the two metals have originally been properly mixed while in
-a state of fusion. These experiments have been made upon cylinders
-weighing many hundreds of pounds, and are entirely conclusive.</p>
-
-<p>This valuable quality is not found in any of the more ordinary alloys
-of copper. The alloy of copper with tin, for example, known as
-<em>gun metal</em>, is notoriously subject to a phenomenon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span> known as
-<em>liquation</em>; in consequence of which a great difference is found
-in the composition of the same casting, both in the top as compared
-with the bottom, and in the centre as compared with the circumference.</p>
-
-<p>This phenomenon often causes great inconvenience, as the different
-parts of large objects will in consequence vary greatly in hardness
-as well as in strength. In casting artillery the difficulty becomes a
-serious one, and no means have yet been discovered by which it can be
-entirely removed.</p>
-
-<p>This homogeneousness of aluminum bronze is a natural consequence of the
-great affinity existing between the two metals of which it is composed;
-and that there is such an affinity is clearly proved by the phenomenon
-attending the manufacture of the alloy. The copper is first melted in
-a crucible and the aluminum is then added to it <em>in ingots</em>. At
-first there is, of course, a reduction of temperature, because the
-aluminum in melting absorbs the heat from the melted copper; and this
-absorption is so great, in consequence of the great capacity for heat
-of aluminum, that a part of the copper may even become solid. But let
-the mixture be stirred a moment with an iron bar, and the two metals
-immediately unite; and in an instant, although the crucible may have
-been removed from the furnace, the temperature of the metals rises to
-incandescence, while the mass becomes as fluid as water.</p>
-
-<p>This enormous disengagement of heat, not seen in the preparation of
-any other ordinary alloy, indicates, not a simple mixture, but a real
-chemical combination of the two metals. The 10 per cent. bronze may
-therefore be properly compared to a salt, the more so as it is found by
-calculation to contain, within a very minute fraction, four equivalents
-of copper to one equivalent of aluminum.</p>
-
-<p>The 10 per cent. bronze may be forged cold, and becomes extremely dense
-under the action of the hammer. The blades of dessert-knives are thus
-treated in order to give them the requisite hardness and elasticity.
-But it has another valuable quality which is found in no other kind
-of brass or bronze: it may be forged hot, as well as, if not better
-than the very best iron. It thus becomes harder and more rigid, and
-its fracture shows a grain similar to that of cast steel. On account
-of the hardness of the aluminum bronze, rolling it into sheets would
-be a tedious and expensive process, were it not for this property of
-being malleable at a red heat. But it may in this manner be rolled into
-sheets of any thickness or drawn into wire of any size. It may also be
-drawn into tubes of any dimension.</p>
-
-<p>From several experiments made at different times at Paris, it appears
-that the breaking weight of the cast bronze varies from 65 to 70
-kilogrammes the square millimetre. The same bronze drawn into wire
-supported a weight of 90 kilogrammes the square millimetre. The iron
-used for suspension bridges, tested in the same manner, did not show an
-average of more than 30 kilogrammes. Some experiments were also made by
-Mr. Anderson, at the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, in England, who tested
-at the same time the aluminum bronze, the brass used for artillery and
-commonly called <em>gun metal</em>, and the cast steel made by Krupp in
-Prussia. Taking for the maximum strength of the bronze the lowest of
-the numbers found as above, we are thus enabled to form the following
-table of comparative tenacities:</p>
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr><td class="tdl">Aluminum bronze 10 per cent.</td><td class="tdr">65</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Crupp’s Cast Steel</td><td class="tdr">53</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Refined Iron</td><td class="tdr">30</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Brass for cannon</td><td class="tdr">28</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The comparative toughness of these same four metals was also tested in
-the following manner: A bar of each was prepared of the same size, and
-each bar was then notched with a chisel to precisely the same depth.
-The bars were broken separately, upon an anvil, by blows from a hammer.
-The last three metals in the table broke each at the first blow, with
-a clean and square fracture. The aluminum bronze only began to crack
-at the eighth blow, and required a number of additional blows before
-the two pieces were entirely separated. And the irregular, torn surface
-of the fracture showed the peculiarly tough and fibrous nature of the
-metal.</p>
-
-<p>The elasticity of the aluminum bronze was tested by M. Tresca,
-Professor at the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers</i>. The
-experiment was made upon a bar of simple cast metal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span> and the following
-is his report: “The coefficient of elasticity of the aluminum bronze,
-the cast metal, is half that of the best wrought-iron. This coefficient
-is double that of brass and four times that of gun metal, under the
-same conditions.”</p>
-
-<p>The specific gravity is 7.7, about the same as iron. Another very
-valuable quality is presented in the fact that it is acted on by
-atmospheric influences less than are silver, brass, or bronze. This
-places it in the same rank with gold, platinum and aluminum.</p>
-
-<p>Very stiff and very elastic, tougher than iron, very little acted upon
-chemically, and in certain cases not at all, capable of being cast like
-ordinary bronze or brass, forged like iron and steel, of being worked
-in every way like the most malleable metals or alloys, having, added
-to these properties, a color analogous to that of the most precious
-metal, this bronze proves itself adapted to uses almost innumerable.
-At first sight, it seems difficult to admit that the relatively small
-proportions of aluminum which enters into the composition of this
-bronze can be sufficient to modify so extraordinarily the properties
-of the copper which constitutes so large a portion of its weight. But
-we must remember that the specific gravity of aluminum is very low,
-and that a given weight of this metal possesses a bulk four times as
-large as the same weight in silver. It follows from this that the ten
-per cent. of aluminum contained in the bronze equals in bulk forty per
-cent. in silver.</p>
-
-<p>The specimens of the ware we have seen, such as spoons, forks, cups,
-watch-cases, etc., are certainly very beautiful, having the color and
-high polish of gold, while dilute acids do not affect the surface.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="On_the_Reduction_of_Silver_in_the_Wet_Way">On the Reduction of Silver in the Wet Way.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Every chemist is familiar with the reduction of chloride of silver
-in the form of powder by means of metallic zinc in the presence of a
-little free acid. It is not easy to bring two such substances as the
-silver salt and the metal into close contact, and after the work is
-accomplished the removal of the excess of zinc has its difficulties.
-<abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Grager suggests a modification of the old method that ought to
-be more generally made known. The chloride of silver is dissolved
-in ammonia and poured into a well-stopped bottle, and into this is
-introduced an excess of metallic zinc, in not too small fragments, so
-that any reduced metal adhering to it may be readily washed off.</p>
-
-<p>The decomposition begins immediately, and is rapidly accomplished,
-especially if the contents of the flask be well shaken up. Three hours
-will suffice to reduce one-quarter of a pound of chloride of silver.
-It is easy to ascertain when the reduction is ended, by testing a
-portion of the ammoniacal solution with hydrochloric acid. As soon as
-no cloudiness or curdy precipitate is formed, the work may be regarded
-as completed.</p>
-
-<p>A slight excess of ammonia is said to be favorable. The reduced silver
-must be washed with water until all odor of ammonia has disappeared.
-The pieces of zinc are removed by pouring the contents of the flask
-through a funnel, the opening of which is too narrow for the passage
-of the zinc fragments, while the reduced silver can be easily washed
-through. The finely divided silver can be digested in hydrochloric
-acid to restore it to a pure white color, and it is then ready for
-solution or fusion, and will be found to be perfectly pure. In dealing
-with large quantities it would be economical to recover a portion of
-the ammonia by distillation. In the same way an ammoniacal solution
-of nitrate of silver can also be reduced by zinc, and the silver
-obtained pure, even when the original solution of the nitrate contains
-copper&mdash;provided a small quantity of silver be kept in the bath.</p>
-
-<p>It is better where copper is present not to take all of the zinc that
-may be requisite for the reduction of the silver. It will prove a
-great convenience to be spared the necessity of converting the silver
-into the chloride, as it is no easy task to wash out this salt on
-filters&mdash;and it will be found to be applicable to alloys which do not
-contain more than 25 per cent. of silver.&mdash;<i>From <abbr title="professor">Prof.</abbr> Joy in the
-Journal of Applied Chemistry.</i></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Obvious errors in punctuation have been fixed.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_7">Page 7</a>: “Mechanique Celeste” changed to “Méchanique Céleste”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_12">Page 12</a>: “ou rexperience” changed to “our experience”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_18">Page 18</a>: “head-quarters far astronomical observations” changed to
-“head-quarters for astronomical observations”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_22">Page 22</a>: “it accomodates” changed to “it accommodates”</p>
-
-<p>The <a href="#CONTENTS">Table of Contents</a> lists “Equation of the Time Table” as the article
-on page 28. The actual article is named “On the Reduction of Silver in
-the Wet Way.” This has intentionally been left as per the original. Similarly, there is no
-actual section titled “Notices of New Tools” despite its inclusion in the Table of Contents,
-and this has been left as per the original.</p>
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL, VOL. I, NO. 1, JULY 1869 ***</div>
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